Artsu Tharaz
The Lamb
- Local time
- Tomorrow 4:19 AM
- Joined
- Dec 12, 2010
- Messages
- 3,134
So I've seen a criticism brought up that MBTI got the J/P dichotomy wrong, since then you have dominant judging Ps and that makes no sense. I couldn't see the logic behind such an argument, as it seemed like a mere definitional problem that could easily be overlooked, however I currently do not believe this to be the case.
It seems to me that J/P really should refer to whether the first function is perception based or judgement based, as this is implicit to the Je+Pi vs Ji+Pe division that was being used.
Thus, the Ti-Ne as we know it should really be INTJ, and Ni-Fe INFP etc.
I don't believe socionics to have gotten this correct either, because they seemed to be confused about which type they were referring to with this dichotomy and thus could not properly discern the differences.
The type listings being developed currently are likely to represent the true divisions, to within statistically acceptable ranges. The primary dichotomies are different however.
I/E = energy away from vs. towards the objective (and similarly towards or away from the subject)
N/S = a tendency to focus on the aspect of [interpreted] vs [literal] worlds of percetion
F/T = a tendency to focus on [values] vs [logic] based judgements
J/P = whether the "dominant" is Judgement or Perception, and likewise whether the auxiliary is Perception of Judgement.
Actually, J/P is not perception dominant/judgement auxiliary per se. Rather, it is of the exact same nature as I/E, in that it is about where the energy flows. In I energy is from world to self, in E it is self to world, in P it is judgement to perception, in J it is perception to judgement (same linguistic formula throughout, thus making them equivalent dichotomies). Presumably, T is about group to self/values to logic, in F it is about self to group/logic to values, in N it is about qualia to idea, in S it is about idea to qualia.
Also, just as we refer to the process of self to world as introversion, we refer to the process of perception to judgement as discernment (question: what is the process of judgement to perception called? I think I used to know, but now I've forgotten).
This makes more sense than how we were using J and P before, so I think this is a better notation to use.
The problem is that this now becomes an Ni-Te forum. O. Welles.
It seems to me that J/P really should refer to whether the first function is perception based or judgement based, as this is implicit to the Je+Pi vs Ji+Pe division that was being used.
Thus, the Ti-Ne as we know it should really be INTJ, and Ni-Fe INFP etc.
I don't believe socionics to have gotten this correct either, because they seemed to be confused about which type they were referring to with this dichotomy and thus could not properly discern the differences.
The type listings being developed currently are likely to represent the true divisions, to within statistically acceptable ranges. The primary dichotomies are different however.
I/E = energy away from vs. towards the objective (and similarly towards or away from the subject)
N/S = a tendency to focus on the aspect of [interpreted] vs [literal] worlds of percetion
F/T = a tendency to focus on [values] vs [logic] based judgements
J/P = whether the "dominant" is Judgement or Perception, and likewise whether the auxiliary is Perception of Judgement.
Actually, J/P is not perception dominant/judgement auxiliary per se. Rather, it is of the exact same nature as I/E, in that it is about where the energy flows. In I energy is from world to self, in E it is self to world, in P it is judgement to perception, in J it is perception to judgement (same linguistic formula throughout, thus making them equivalent dichotomies). Presumably, T is about group to self/values to logic, in F it is about self to group/logic to values, in N it is about qualia to idea, in S it is about idea to qualia.
Also, just as we refer to the process of self to world as introversion, we refer to the process of perception to judgement as discernment (question: what is the process of judgement to perception called? I think I used to know, but now I've forgotten).
This makes more sense than how we were using J and P before, so I think this is a better notation to use.
The problem is that this now becomes an Ni-Te forum. O. Welles.