Fukyo
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- Jan 4, 2009
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I think we aren't talking about the same things, ApplePie. 
I guess it's my fault for not clarifying why I use these terms; I'll do it now. I'll also explain my understanding of the typology in general. Hopefully I'll make more sense this time.
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The traditional MBTI is mostly concerned with the four letter codes that dictate the personality. It will supply you with "personality descriptions" and expect you to perfectly fit into a highly faulty box. It uses a very deceiving testing method that measures how many blank, one sided traits you posses and assigns you a dichotomy accordingly. It uses terms such as "Judger" and "Feeler" to describe the dichotomies. It only mentions the cognitive functions offhandedly, not giving them the credit they deserve.
Why is the neglect of functions bad? Why are the profiles a faulty box? What is wrong with the four letter axis?
The "personality descriptions" are highly generalized, archetypal, vague summaries of a set of possible behaviors that emerge in a certain type. In fact, too vague to even be considered categories in my opinion. Is it realistic to expect all people belonging to one type to conform to these notions perfectly when the human psyche is inherently more complex?
This is where we reach the problem. MBTI is about motives, causes, the roots in the psyche that cause behaviors. This is why I refer to functions as mechanisms, because they are the foundation, the building blocks. The behavior itself is a product of these mechanisms and their interaction. Not to be the end of it, there is a huge amount of variables and factors involved in how these mechanisms will manifest in the individual psyche, creating a variety of possibilities and outcomes within what was previously thought of as a "box".
This is why I find what's written above inaccurate. I don't think in terms of the 4 letter axis, because I find it misleading, nor do I use the terms "Perceiver" and "Judger". I also recommend anyone with a serious interest in MBTI to focus on the functional mechanisms for the reasons I stated above. This only assuming you are interested in figuring out the roots of a certain behavior and not behavior itself. If your intention is simply to assign a name to a set of observable behaviors then yes, a close approximation of "Judger" would be the one seeking closure, and "Perceiver" the one that is open ended.
Still, regardless of my discomfort with this, as the terms and language used in MBTI are already ambiguous enough to the point of obfuscation, if your purpose is simply to summarize an observable behavior, these will suffice.

I guess it's my fault for not clarifying why I use these terms; I'll do it now. I'll also explain my understanding of the typology in general. Hopefully I'll make more sense this time.
--
The traditional MBTI is mostly concerned with the four letter codes that dictate the personality. It will supply you with "personality descriptions" and expect you to perfectly fit into a highly faulty box. It uses a very deceiving testing method that measures how many blank, one sided traits you posses and assigns you a dichotomy accordingly. It uses terms such as "Judger" and "Feeler" to describe the dichotomies. It only mentions the cognitive functions offhandedly, not giving them the credit they deserve.
Why is the neglect of functions bad? Why are the profiles a faulty box? What is wrong with the four letter axis?
The "personality descriptions" are highly generalized, archetypal, vague summaries of a set of possible behaviors that emerge in a certain type. In fact, too vague to even be considered categories in my opinion. Is it realistic to expect all people belonging to one type to conform to these notions perfectly when the human psyche is inherently more complex?
This is where we reach the problem. MBTI is about motives, causes, the roots in the psyche that cause behaviors. This is why I refer to functions as mechanisms, because they are the foundation, the building blocks. The behavior itself is a product of these mechanisms and their interaction. Not to be the end of it, there is a huge amount of variables and factors involved in how these mechanisms will manifest in the individual psyche, creating a variety of possibilities and outcomes within what was previously thought of as a "box".
I hope I didn't destroy your message in the copy and paste, but so far I'm concluding, who cares about any function/ behavior meanings? The essential difference between judging and perceiving is the judger is picky while the perceiver presents what to pick from. Now that only needs to be put in more elegant words.
The perceiver presents the field
The judger chooses from the field
If this doesn't capture all that happens, does it not capture exactly
how to tell the two apart and does so using a common language?
This is why I find what's written above inaccurate. I don't think in terms of the 4 letter axis, because I find it misleading, nor do I use the terms "Perceiver" and "Judger". I also recommend anyone with a serious interest in MBTI to focus on the functional mechanisms for the reasons I stated above. This only assuming you are interested in figuring out the roots of a certain behavior and not behavior itself. If your intention is simply to assign a name to a set of observable behaviors then yes, a close approximation of "Judger" would be the one seeking closure, and "Perceiver" the one that is open ended.
Still, regardless of my discomfort with this, as the terms and language used in MBTI are already ambiguous enough to the point of obfuscation, if your purpose is simply to summarize an observable behavior, these will suffice.