Re: What is the difference between INTP and ENTP
The only people capable of arguing that Jung's Si descriptions and modern descriptions of IS_Js match up reasonably well are people so desperate to believe that Jung had essentially (and correctly) figured it all out back in 1921 that they're willing to read black as white and night as day if that's what it takes.
I never said that Jung had "figured it all out." Only that it was incorrect to say that "he got a lot wrong." And as you'll see from what I've written below, only someone who is "desperate" to find an inconsistency between the theory and the data would interpret Jung as you have, ie incorrectly.
For the record, I appreciate and value what other MBTI authors have written, and in fact I read those authors before I approached Jung, but I found his descriptions added a deeper dimension to what they said that significantly expanded my understanding of ISTJs.
First of all, you didn't address any of my points, as usual you just spouted "recycled reckful" at me. I think you should take your own advice and make sure you read everything I wrote to you, because contrary to what you might think, you don't have all the answers on this, just your own interpretation. You made some interesting points, but your conclusion does not do Jung justice.
Let's go over your post line by line:
As Jung saw it, Si-doms were awkward, touchy eccentrics, detached from reality, who inhabited "a mythological world, where men, animals, railways, houses, rivers, and mountains appear partly as benevolent deities and partly as malevolent demons." Not only does Jung's portrait bear little resemblance to a typical IS_J, I think anyone not inclined to treat Jung with too much reverence would have to agree that Jung's portrait bears little resemblance to any significantly numerous group of normal-range people who've ever walked the face of the earth.
This is
your interpretation reckful. It's the foundation of your argument, and I'm sorry, but that is just not how Jung portrays Si-doms. You take a lot of things out of context and zero in on a few token phrases to make your point. First of all, and as you yourself correctly pointed out, Jung approaches the types as a
clinician first and foremost and seeks to understand both the "normal" version and the "sick" version. He usually devotes equal amounts of time to both, but I think that with the IS_J, he actually spent more time dealing with the "sick" case. You have to understand that his objective is to look deeply into this type's mind and expose its inner workings as opposed to describing the commonly observable traits of Si-doms. Incidentally, what MBTI authors have written about this type would be fairly useless to a clinician. His business was
healing the psyche, and as far as Si-doms are concerned, and based on my experience living with an ISTJ father for 20 years, he absolutely nailed it.
The other MBTI authors that you mentioned are not very concerned with the medical aspect of type and seek mainly to describe observable traits. I would bet that if you spoke with Linda Berens, Thomson, Myers, etc. they would tell you that they deliberately stepped away from this description not because they disagreed with it and thought Jung "got it wrong" but because it was frankly too inaccessible to the general public, and didn't focus enough on typical traits and behavior. You're not going to get any argument from me that their descriptions are more straightforward than his and certainly easier to understand.
Let's go over what I think is a more valid interpretation of what Jung says:
Jung said:
Introverted sensation apprehends the background of the physical world rather than its surface.
We could say that introverted sensation transmits an image which does not so much reproduce the object as spread over it the patina of age-old subjective experience and the shimmer of events still unborn. The bare sense impression develops in depth, reaching into the past and future, while extraverted sensation seizes on the momentary existence of things open to the light of day.
It is an irrational type because it is oriented...simply by what happens...the introverted type is guided by the intensity of the subjective sensation excited by the objective stimulus...Did there exist an aptitude for expression in any way proportional to the intensity of his sensations, the irrationality of this type would be extraordinarily striking...But since this is the exception, the introvert's characteristic difficulty in expressing himself also conceals his irrationality.
The first quote shows that Jung believes the Si type to be fairly oblivious to the surface of the physical world. Again, as I argued in my earlier post, and if you really did grow up with IS_J types, you will agree with me that this type is extraordinarily
impractical when it comes to hands-on problem-solving. While it's true that this type is excellent (realistic, practical, methodical) when it comes to hair-splitting analysis of legal doctrines or tax codes, these are not
physical in nature; put a broken X(insert anything physical here) and they will be utterly lost, doggedly trying to fix it without success.
The second quote is I believe part of the foundation for Keirsey's labeling this type as "Guardians." It's my interpretation from this quote that anytime an Si-dom encounters an object, they basically overlay on top of it their past subjective experience. At least, I think it's fair to say that that is a major part of the psychological mechanics at play here for Jung. The bit about the future is likely related somehow to Jung's belief in the collective unconscious, ie that we are all somehow linked together. If there's anything in what he said that could be construed as "wrong" from an empirical standpoint, that would be it.
The third quote indicates that Jung thought it was very unlikely that Si-doms had any aptitude for artistic expression, (Did there exist...) or at least an aptitude that was proportional to the intensity of the subjective sensations at play within them. Again this was Jung's hypothesis. I'm inclined to believe him, based on what I've seen (ISTJs are not very expressive either in words or art) but you have every right to be skeptical of it. In either case, there's no way to verify it. Continuing on:
Jung said:
What will make an impression and what will not can never be seen in advance, and from outside....
...when the influence of the object does not break through completely, it is met with well-intentioned neutrality, disclosing little sympathy yet constantly striving to soothe and adjust....
He may be conspicuous for his calmness and passivity or for his rational self-control...
The too low is raised a little, the too high is lowered, enthusiasm is damped down, extravagance restrained, and anything out of the ordinary reduced to the right formula.
All of that discussion relating to the unconscious that you find so obtuse that precedes these quotes lays the groundwork for this conclusion. As you can see, Jung clearly did not think of Si-doms as "awkward, touchy, eccentrics." If anything, it's actually quite the opposite, he thinks they are extraordinarily "innocuous" and that this is the real reason why they sometimes run into problems with other people because they appear in fact too ordinary, too calm, and too passive, and therefore become targets of others who are more "domineering and aggressive."
Again, in my experience, all of this holds true. My ISTJ father is the absolute embodiment of this, and if you adopt my personal interpretation of what Jung said here, it meshes quite nicely with what other MBTI authors wrote about this type. And I believe his description actually is much more profound because it's possible to discern the underlying mental landscape of this type.
When its [the object's]influence does succeed in penetrating into the subject-because of its special intensity or because of its complete analogy with the unconscious image-even the normal type will be compelled to act in accordance with the unconscious model. Such action has an illusory character unrelated to objective reality and is extremely disconcerting. It instantly reveals the reality-alienating subjectivity of this type.
Admittedly, this is a bit hard to access, but I believe Jung is actually referring to the inferior (Ne) here due to his use of the words "unconscious model." What he's saying is that when a situation arises in the environment that somehow penetrates deeply enough, it's going to trigger Ne and lead to some very strange reactions. To give you an example, and you may have had a different experience, but every time my ISTJ father was faced with traveling somewhere new (ie encountering lots of new and unfamiliar territory), it was an extraordinarily stressful experience, and he would become unusually irritable, petuous, argumentative, whiny, etc. Basically acting like child. You could plainly see that for him, he was suddenly transported into an alternate universe full of "ambiguous, shadowy, sordid, dangerous possibilities lurking in the background." As he traveled more extensively though, his stress levels declined significantly b/c past experience had shown him that his fears were unjustified.
Contrast this with me (INTP), I always get a thrill out of going somewhere new and I never get stressed out. Recently on a white-water rafting trip, there was a 20-something ISTJ librarian and out of our group, she was the only one who was terribly nervous about going on the river and told everyone that she had imagined all kinds of nasty scenarios before going on the trip. Textbook inferior Ne. Everyone else in the group was either excited, or a little nervous, but definitely not to the same degree.
In general, this type can organize his impressions only in archaic ways, because thinking and feeling are relatively unconscious and, if conscious at all, have at their disposal only the most necessary banal, everyday means of expression. As conscious functions, they are wholly incapable of adequately reproducing his subjective perceptions. This type, there is uncommonly inaccessible to objective understanding, and he usually fares no better in understanding himself.
You're interpreting this bit incorrectly. We're talking about "subjective sense impressions" and not objective facts/details. And once again, Jung nails it. I've lived with my ISTJ father for 2 decades, and I still feel like the guy is a bit of a mystery to me. For a long time I thought he just didn't like to share very much with us about his thoughts/feelings/etc. Now I know better. He doesn't really understand himself very well
either. He doesn't know how to express his feelings in words or in art, typically refrains from doing so ("As a rule he resigns himself to his isolation and the banality of the world, which he has unconsciously made archaic") and even when pressed, he's only capable of very basic descriptions, like "I feel sad" or "I'm frustrated" and I'll only get that if I ask him directly "How do you
really feel?"
Now to the contentious part:
From an extraverted and rationalistic standpoint, these types are indeed the most useless of men.
[Paragraph 653]
Above all, his development alienates him from the reality of the object, leaving him at the mercy of his subjective perceptions, which orient his consciousness to an archaic reality, although his lack of comparative judgment keeps him wholly unconscious of this fact. Actually he lives in a mythological world, where men, animals, locomotives, houses, rivers, and mountains appear either as benevolent deities or as malevolent demons...
If I understand correctly, this is your biggest bone of contention in terms of how MBTI and Jung characterize IS_Js. Admittedly, at first blush, it would appear that Jung has made an enormous mistake in his characterization of IS_Js, as all the ones that I know are indeed very productive members of society, and actually many are extremely good at what they do (making particularly good judges, lawyers, physicians, software programmers, etc.).
Buuut, this has to be interpreted in a certain context. After 1915, Jung broke with Freud and underwent a long period of isolation. Sometimes seeing patients, but other times cloistering himself in his little castle tower and refusing all visits for days on end. Given that ISTJs have now been discovered by MBTI to be one of the most "grounded, and practical [in certain ways]" of all types (and productive to boot!), it may seem strange that Jung made these pronouncements,
but not if you consider the fact that his only interaction with these types was probably exclusively reserved to the sick ones. We have to wonder, given their typical proclivities, what percent of IS_Js are mentally ill? Unfortunately, I could not find a reliable statistic on this. Perhaps you know? But I would bet the number is low. Nevertheless, if we assume this paragraph was written with primarily the sick ones in mind, Jung once again gets it right:
But as soon as the unconscious becomes antagonistic, the archaic intuitions come to the surface and exert their pernicious influence, forcing themselves on the individual and producing compulsive ideas of the most perverse kind. The result is usually a compulsion neurosis, in which the hysterical features are masked by symptoms of exhaustion.
Guess what that sounds like? Yup,
obsessive-compulsive personality disorder.
Admittedly, and you're free to correct me on this, but Jung's description in that paragraph sounds an awful lot like schizophrenia to me as well, and I found several articles online that found correlations between the I, S, F, T, and J dimensions and this illness. I don't know very much about the research on this, but just from the quick cursory searching that I did online, there does seem to be some correlation between the IS_J types and both of those illnesses.
Now if you still want to claim after all of that that "Jung got it wrong" I think that's a very crude conclusion given the fact that Jung was such a hermit during this time of his life and only interacted with mental cases ie people who definitely were not normal. His assessment of sick IS_Js appears to be on the mark when seen in this light.