It's always a sign we're into some juicy stuff when reckful shows up with his "MBTI (dichotomies) is verified science, read all about it" text can.
Now I'll start with saying that there are likely going to be things we simply hold on to differing premises on, and it's best simply to recognise those and leave them be. Pointless arguments usually result from people failing to recognise that they're starting from incompatible premises. I'm looking at things with a view to having a productive exchange.
So let's see.
Originally Posted by EyeSeeCold View Post
I wasn't referring to Socionics but the dichotomies in themselves, it holds true irrespective of the particular theory. If you are confused please point out where you got the impression I was speaking about Socionics.
Your statement that J/P (j/p for Socionics) is redundant is far from true in an absolute sense for either system. It's in no way true for MBTI and it's true only in a sense for Socionics. The sense in which it's true for Socionics is of course that there is an alternative three-letter naming system.
You misunderstood what I meant then, what you're saying here is a slightly different topic.
In that paragraph my primary assertion was the J/P dichotomy is NOT an independent dichotomy -- the lack of independence here refers to J or P calling upon more than one aspect of functions, therefore it can't be used as a single separate dimension in statistics. If we are measuring the traits of a population looking for Pness we're already begging the question of what Pness is by saying only Pe+Ji types can have Pness. Instead Pness should be a quality that all types can have, except some types have more Pness than others, but how can Je+Pi types have any Pness if you already said P=Pe? This is the
error of MBTI that is true regardless of the system you
adhere to.
Instead, Pness should be a quality of all types and a sliding scale in the population. TiNe's pness is caused by extraverted perception which is perhaps more
readily apparent than NiTe's pness which is caused by introverted perception. But the effect that their perception functions have on their respective inner
lives and psychologies(and not just how others see them) could be greater or less than the other and would manifest in different ways. This would already be the case if we accept that Pness is a quality of all perceiving functions and not only those types with extraverted perception.
Socionics j/p indicates dominant rationality/irrationality, a quality at the heart of the system. MBTI J/P indicates rationality/irrationality of the primary extraverted function. Another way to look at it is introversion/extroversion of the primary rational function. This is also a quality at the heart of the system.
It seems to me that each construct is clear and useful enough to serve its purpose within the confines of its respective system.
In fact, this difference embodies the legitimate difference in original premises between the two systems. It's the self-evident cause of the J/P switch in introverts.
The problem is not that J/P is unable to separate types, it's that judging and perceiving are misunderstood function qualities in MBTI. Which is why the phenomenon of J/P flipping exists.
You'll note from the construct that J/P in MBTI tells you nothing about the dominant function (or any other function). It only tells you other things beyond the definition above after you already know certain things. This is no different then from F/T or E/I or S/N.
Yes it does not say about the dominant function but that is beside the point. I/E is an attitude that directs the flow of the 4 basic functions. The 4 basic functions therefore can exist under two states: introverted or extraverted which gives us a total of 8 functions. Se Si Ni Ne Fi Fe Ti Te. Now there is one more quality that divides these 8 functions, but
nothing else is needed to construct them. The dividing quality is that half these functions are perception and half are judgment. It would make sense then to split these functions along those qualities, but instead in MBTI we split them along a
pre-existing type configuration, which is whatever the types' extraverted function is. Therefore MBTI J/P is a quality of types
not functions. Socionics j/p is a quality of
both functions and types.
Do you now see how it is not similar to the other dichotomies?
The statement you made was basically a definition of the Socionics three-letter naming system. You spelled out how one could be an LII. My response brought that to your (and everyone else's) attention.
This was another misunderstanding on your part. Again in my
first paragraph here, I wasn't building a type using three dichotomies in the style of Socionics. I was explaining how the other 3 dichotomies behave differently than J/P under MBTI.
eyeseecold
If the first extraverted function is perceiving then we can conclude certain functions that are present in that configuration: Ne / Se and Ti / Fi, because if your extraverted function is perceiving then it is either Ne or Se, and Ti or Fi will follow. Extending this to judgment as well then we can depict what J/P is really a dichotomy of:
MBTI P: Ne/Se, Ti/Fi
MBTI J: Ni/Si, Te/Fe
To reiterate, Ti/Fi are logically deduced just by knowing if Ne or Se is present. Therefore a property of MBTI Perception is Ti/Fi judgment
Yes, just as it is in Socionics. You can't have Pe without Ji bundled with it.
Except you can! It's called Extraverted Perception, and Ji is Introverted Judgement. Why is Introverted
Judgment bundled as a trait of being a
Perceiving type? This is clearly contradictory logic.
Obviously you need both to build a type. But that's not the point of contention.
You take an Introverted Judging type in Socionics and it will be Ti dom or Fi dom, the only thing perceiving about them is that they have Extraverted Perception for the auxiliary function.
How so?
Not a property of, but indivisible from. This is a basic tenet of Jung's theory. Neither MBTI nor Socionics has deviated from that. I'm confused by this line of argument.
Nothing is reclassified. MBTI J/P informs us of a property of the first rational function (or alternatively the first irrational function, or alternatively the first extroverted function, or alternatively the first introverted function). These are merely various lenses. If anything it lends a certain elegance and dexterity to the conception. Socionics j/p informs us of a property of the dominant function. Different constructs, same essence.
It's not different to me. The difference in naming constructs is just that. It doesn't meaningfully alter the taxonomy of types.
Neither. Both are perfectly consistent on their own terms.
Neither does.
I hope my responses above have rendered it unnecessary to respond to this.
I'm sorry but if you fail to see the inconsistency in MBTI here then there's no way you could grasp how this affects the types
in practice when people start to write
profile descriptions about types based on how they
individually understand the dichotomies. Or when they try to explain
function dynamics according to the dichotomies.
You can't sit there and tell me the ignorance of the Rationality/Irrationality dichotomy or that the re-definition/refocusing of what Perception and Judgment are has no impact on how people understand functions. It's like saying you have Water types and Fire types, and just because a pond stream(Ni, Si dom) has water it has to be treated the same as a waterfall(Ni, Si are Js despite T/F being secondary); or that an ignited match is no different than a brush fire.
The validity of the types is at risk regardless of whether you prefer MBTI or Socionics. There is no error, only the constructs you find more useful or meaningful.
Nothing has been substantiated in either system. What has been substantiated is social E/I, which is correlated with but by no means the same as cognitive E/I.
Yes, though you're specifically talking Socionics again. Absolute judgement or perception is not part of MBTI. The appropriate element to replace the third in your list is "it is an introverted judging function and not introverted perceiving".
We already know since we've said we are Ti. The question is redundant.
A matter purely for Socionics.
Why is absolute judgment or perception not part of MBTI? Why should it count for nothing? Don't you think we're throwing away and ignoring useful information by doing that?