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A regular phenomenon I have noticed is that certain people are completely unable to settle on their type, but are usually able to narrow it down to 3/4 of the MBTI dichotomies.
To eliminate bias, when citing prototypes I will use an X to represent a missing letter and a ~ to represent a selection.
To start off, there are some people who think they are INTP/J. I would call these types ~~~X and they are neither ambiverts nor pure types, but hybrid types. I do not profess to have any understanding of how hybrid types are formed but I believe the phenomenon is so prevalent that it must be true. Although I would readily accept that a compelling majority of people have their type wrong, as according to Jungian descriptions, on a rare occasion, a legitimate hybrid type occurs.
Hybrid types, by definition, have no dominant function, I suppose ... and it seems the working theory is that the interaction between one dominant and auxiliary pair produces effects that are similar to/indistinguishable from another function pair (indistinguishable both subjectively and objectively). In this instance, it is most difficult to distinguish between which functions are manufactured and which ones are natural, and people seem to settle on a hybrid type. I would submit at this time, that if a hybrid type were to actually exist, they would most certainly not lean to one side or the other. In this way, I deliberately mean to exclude those who claim to "switch" between one type and another, as they are clearly one type, and only one type.
Ambiversion:
This is a curious subject as well, because once more, these types have no dominant function. Jung wrote of the auxiliary as being ever-present, and only slightly repressed as it only slightly opposes the psychic functioning of the dominant. The auxiliary is thus defined as a balancing function, meaning in effect that all people (or .. most people) are somewhat ambiverted. This natural ambiversion is what makes it exceedingly difficult to identify the dominant function (which, as we know, is critical to typing somebody accurately). Modern theories reflect this, and those who express the auxiliary in equal proportions to the dominant are known as true ambiverts. These people have the type code X~~~, and relate equally well to two different Jungian descriptions.
Pure Types:
Approximately nine tenths of Types, Chapter X, is devoted to exploring "pure types", that is, types that express only one function in consciousness, and repress the other three to a significant degree. Although Jung makes explicit mention that pure types should not be expected to occur in reality, that they are an extreme rarity, they do appear to exist, at least ... they appear to exist.
A modern interpretation of the text would be to examine each "type" as having two sub-types (i.e. the Te type being ESTJ and ENTJ) ... from which it naturally follows that the more energy one focuses into the dominant, and neglects the auxiliary, the more the auxiliary is naturally repressed as a result. When this happens to such an extreme degree that the inferior functions are all completely repressed into unconsciousness, leaving only the dominant remaining, we can confidently speak of a "pure type".
At the very least, we might expect a pure type to be extremely neurotic and single minded.
Pure types have a type code of IX~P, I~XJ, EX~J, E~XP.
Summary:
Missing letters produce valid type codes, in these three instances: ambiversion, hybrid types, pure types.
To eliminate bias, when citing prototypes I will use an X to represent a missing letter and a ~ to represent a selection.
To start off, there are some people who think they are INTP/J. I would call these types ~~~X and they are neither ambiverts nor pure types, but hybrid types. I do not profess to have any understanding of how hybrid types are formed but I believe the phenomenon is so prevalent that it must be true. Although I would readily accept that a compelling majority of people have their type wrong, as according to Jungian descriptions, on a rare occasion, a legitimate hybrid type occurs.
Hybrid types, by definition, have no dominant function, I suppose ... and it seems the working theory is that the interaction between one dominant and auxiliary pair produces effects that are similar to/indistinguishable from another function pair (indistinguishable both subjectively and objectively). In this instance, it is most difficult to distinguish between which functions are manufactured and which ones are natural, and people seem to settle on a hybrid type. I would submit at this time, that if a hybrid type were to actually exist, they would most certainly not lean to one side or the other. In this way, I deliberately mean to exclude those who claim to "switch" between one type and another, as they are clearly one type, and only one type.
Ambiversion:
This is a curious subject as well, because once more, these types have no dominant function. Jung wrote of the auxiliary as being ever-present, and only slightly repressed as it only slightly opposes the psychic functioning of the dominant. The auxiliary is thus defined as a balancing function, meaning in effect that all people (or .. most people) are somewhat ambiverted. This natural ambiversion is what makes it exceedingly difficult to identify the dominant function (which, as we know, is critical to typing somebody accurately). Modern theories reflect this, and those who express the auxiliary in equal proportions to the dominant are known as true ambiverts. These people have the type code X~~~, and relate equally well to two different Jungian descriptions.
Pure Types:
Approximately nine tenths of Types, Chapter X, is devoted to exploring "pure types", that is, types that express only one function in consciousness, and repress the other three to a significant degree. Although Jung makes explicit mention that pure types should not be expected to occur in reality, that they are an extreme rarity, they do appear to exist, at least ... they appear to exist.
A modern interpretation of the text would be to examine each "type" as having two sub-types (i.e. the Te type being ESTJ and ENTJ) ... from which it naturally follows that the more energy one focuses into the dominant, and neglects the auxiliary, the more the auxiliary is naturally repressed as a result. When this happens to such an extreme degree that the inferior functions are all completely repressed into unconsciousness, leaving only the dominant remaining, we can confidently speak of a "pure type".
At the very least, we might expect a pure type to be extremely neurotic and single minded.
Pure types have a type code of IX~P, I~XJ, EX~J, E~XP.
Summary:
Missing letters produce valid type codes, in these three instances: ambiversion, hybrid types, pure types.