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< comparison of Jung's 8 types (2001)
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(March, 2007 Note: Most of
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Go there for the latest version of articles. However, the links
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Excerpted and adapted from "Gifts Differing"
by Isabel Briggs-Myers
| Comparison of Extraverted and Introverted
Thinking |
| Extraverted Thinking E_TJ |
Introverted Thinking I_TP |
| Is fed from objective data - facts and borrowed ideas. |
Is fed from subjective and unconscious roots - archetypes. |
| Depends upon the facts of experience and regards the abstract
idea as unsubstantial and of negligible importance. |
Depends upon the abstract idea as the decisive factor, and
values facts chiefly as illustrative proofs of the idea. |
| Relies on the facts outside of the thinker, which are more
decisive than the thinking itself, for soundness and value. |
Relies on the thinker's powers of observation and appreciation
and use of the inner wealth of inherited experience for soundness
and value. |
| Has as its goal the solution of practical problems, discovery
and classification of facts, criticism and modification of generally
accepted ideas, planning or programs, and developing of formulas. |
Has as its goal formulating questions, creating theories,
opening up of prospects, yielding insight, and finally, seeing
how external facts fit into the framework of the idea or theory
it has created. |
| Dwells upon the details of the concrete case, including irrelevancies. |
Seizes upon the similarities of the concrete case, dismissing
irrelevancies. |
| Has a tendency to multiply facts until their meaning is smothered
and thinking paralyzed. |
Has a tendency to neglect facts or to coerce them into agreement
with the idea, selecting only those which support the idea. |
| Consists of a succession of concrete representations that
are set in motion not so much by an inner thought activity as
by the changing stream of sense perceptions. |
Consists of an inner thought activity, tied loosely if at
all to the stream of sense impressions, which are dimmed by the
vividness of the stream of inner impressions. |
| Comparison of Extraverted and Introverted
Feeling |
| Extraverted Feeling E_FJ |
Introverted Feeling I_FP |
| Is determined chiefly by the objective factor and serves
to make the individual feel correctly, that is, conventionally,
under all circumstances. |
Is determined chiefly by the subjective factor and serves
as a guide to the emotional acceptance or rejection of various
aspects of life. |
| Adapts the individual to the objective situation. |
Adapts the objective situation to the individual by the simple
process of excluding or ignoring the unacceptable. |
| Depends wholly upon the ideals, conventions, and customs
of the environment, and is extensive rather than deep. |
Depends upon abstract feeling - ideals such as love, patriotism,
religion, and loyalty, and is deep and passionate rather than
extensive. |
| Finds soundness and value outside of the individual in the
collective ideals of the community, which are usually accepted
without question. |
Finds soundness and value inside one's self from one's own
inner wealth and powers of appreciation and abstraction. |
| Has as goal the formation and maintenance of easy and harmonious
emotional relationships with other people. |
Has as goal the fostering and protection of an intense inner
emotional life, and, so far as possible, the outer fulfillment
and realization of the inner ideal. |
| Expresses itself easily and so shares itself with others,
creating and arousing similar feeling and establishing warm sympathy
and understanding. |
May be too overpowering to be expressed at all, creating
a false appearance of coldness to the point of indifference,
and be completely misunderstood. |
| Has a tendency to suppress the personal standpoint entirely,
and presents the danger of becoming a feeling personality, giving
the effect of insincerity and pose. |
Has a tendency to find no objective fulfillment or realization,
or outlet - for expression, and presents the danger of living
upon sentiment, illusion, and self-pity. |
| Comparison of Extraverted and Introverted
Sensing |
| Extraverted Sensing ES_P |
Introverted Sensing IS_J |
| Suppresses as far as possible the subjective element of the
sense impression. |
Suppresses as far as possible the objective element of the
sense impression. |
| Values the object sensed rather than the subjective impression,
of which the individual may hardly be aware. |
Values the subjective impression released by the object rather
than the object itself, of which the individual may hardly be
aware. |
| Sees things photographically, the impression being one of
concrete reality and nothing more. The "primrose by a river's
brim" is simply a primrose. |
Sees things highly colored by the subjective factor, the
impression being merely suggested by the object and coming out
of the unconscious in the form of some meaning or significance. |
| Leads to concrete enjoyment, seizing very fully the momentary
and manifest existence of things, and that only. |
Leads to ideas, through the activation of archetypes, seizing
the background of the physical world rather than its surface. |
| Develops attention that is riveted by the strongest stimulus,
which invariably becomes the center of interest, so that life
seems wholly under the influence of accidental outer happenings. |
Develops attention that is very selective, guided wholly
by the inner constellation of interests, so that it is impossible
to predict what outer stimulus will catch and hold attention. |
| Develops a pleasure-loving outer self, very rich in undigested
experience and unclassified knowledge of uninterpreted facts. |
Develops an extremely eccentric and individual inner self,
which sees things other people do not see, and may appear very
irrational. |
| Must be balanced by introverting judgment, or it makes as
shallow, wholly empirical personality, with many superstitions
and no morality except collective conventions and taboos. |
Must be balanced by extraverting judgment, or it makes a
silent, inaccessible personality, wholly uncommunicative, with
no conversation except conventional banalities about the weather
and other collective interests. |
| Comparison of Extraverted and Introverted
Intuition |
| Extraverted Intuition EN_P |
Introverted Intuition IN_J |
| Uses the inner understanding in the interests of the objective
situation. |
Uses the objective situation in the interests of the inner
understanding. |
| Regards the immediate situation as a prison from which escape
is urgently necessary and aims to escape by means of some sweeping
change in the objective situation. |
Regards the immediate situation as a prison from which escape
is urgently necessary and aims to escape through some sweeping
change in the subjective understanding of the objective situation. |
| Is wholly directed upon outer objects, searching for emerging
possibilities, and will sacrifice all else for such possibilities
when found. |
Receives its impetus from outer objects but is never arrested
by external possibilities, being occupied rather by searching
out new angles for viewing and understanding life. |
| May be artistic, scientific, mechanical, inventive, industrial,
commercial, social, political, or adventurous. |
May be creative in any field: artistic, literary, scientific,
inventive, philosophical, or religious. |
| Finds self-expression natural and easy. |
Finds self-expression difficult. |
| Finds its greatest value in the promotion and initiation
of new enterprises. |
Finds it greatest value lies in the interpretation of life
and then promotion of understanding. |
| Requires the development of balancing judgment not only for
the criticism and evaluation of the intuitive enthusiasms but
also to hold it to the completion of its various activities. |
Requires the development of balancing judgment not only for
the criticism and evaluation of intuitive understanding but to
enable it to impart its visions to others and bring them to practical
usefulness in the world. |
| Both are characterized by habitual expectancy;
both have quick understanding. |
Copyright
2001, Robert I. Winer, M.D.
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