nanook
a scream in a vortex
I often wonder if we should classify only four types, the one's which share the same four functions, as objective types, meaning they "can be nailed down with certainty, appear to be genetically inborn" and the other types as subtypes, defined by a character that has grown in life, reflecting circumstances. That character would be like a housholder to a house, he could in principle change his type, using given material, even though renovating is a lot of work. If you think about houses, they can be difficult to classify. They may all have windows, doors, rooms, perhaps a Veranda, but there are more than 4 ways of mixing those elements up. More than four subtypes of "houses"/real types. Sure, you could enforce categories violently "your veranda is too small, it counts only as doormat", but who is to judge. Certainly it's a house, nobody argues that.
Perhaps introversion is decided by circumstance, but hormonally in the womb, so after birth we would have eight sub types.
I've been looking at children, and there is a physical transformation at age 3 or so, but i'm not sure of it's meaning. Children look more similar to each other, before that.
I've also been thinking more about apes, how we are still apes and in how far apes are already like humans, having types perhaps. I'm clueless about apes though.
Perhaps introversion is decided by circumstance, but hormonally in the womb, so after birth we would have eight sub types.
I've been looking at children, and there is a physical transformation at age 3 or so, but i'm not sure of it's meaning. Children look more similar to each other, before that.
I've also been thinking more about apes, how we are still apes and in how far apes are already like humans, having types perhaps. I'm clueless about apes though.