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there are hardly even words to explain that the structure underlying the 4 letter abbreviations ALSO consists of dichotomies, but that they are NOT the seemingly non-interacting set of 4 discreet binary oppositions that seems to be present on the surface
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I find it to be a serious structural inaccessibility issue that it’s not remotely clear to an outsider why, for example, an INFP has more in common cognitively with an ISFP or an ENFP than an INFJ, or why INTJ is an intuition dominant type where ENTJ is a thinking dominant type
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something I’ve toyed with as well is reducing the abbreviation to three letters, with the 2nd/3rd being interchangeable as a replacement for the role of the 4th letter, while also making the dominant function immediately apparent: ENFP becomes ENF, INFP = IFN, INFJ = INF, etc.
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Well, Jung *explicitly* rejected the typology himself, for very similar reasons... MBTI is huckstership, if occasionally entertaining. The rare strand of seeming insight is borrowed wisdom from Jung, IMO.
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let me clarify: my approach to type theory only includes MBTI to the extent of *language*; the psychometric test is of limited utility, but the 4 letter abbreviations are useful bc a) they don’t clash with Jung at all and b) there’s a broad precedent for them, esp. online
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I mean specifically the exercise of categorizing people into types. I would love to, but it's one of those implausibly r emembered factoids years after reading,so I'd have to look it up. I'm planning to do a big Jung (re-)reading this year. I'll let you know if I find it.
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one thing that consistently astounds me about Jung is how he addresses almost every common (even today) denunciation of type theory in the foundational text of the field itself. really bugs me how often I see people rehashing the same arguments when they haven’t done the research