1. Moore & Gillette (1991) “King, Warrior, Magician, Lover: Rediscovering the Archetypes of the Mature Masculine”: This is a superior self-help book (I quite like self-help books). But it suffers from a generational misreading of Jung.
7. This must contradict Jung, whose archetypes were deeply embedded. Basically, Moore and Gillette update Jung for the late 80s/90s. They rely quite heavily on films to understand the world (they are American) and end up interpreting the masculine as feminine in some ways.
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8. Another abuse of Jung is found in the Myers-Briggs personality test, which used to be popular for career management. This divides people into different personality types (INFJ, ENFJ etc). But Jung’s psychology was holistic. It was against dividing people in this way.
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9. Especially to turn them into “Human Resources”. He may have acknowledged the predominance of certain traits, but the goal would be to work these traits together into a whole. But Myers-Briggs is anti-holistic. It encourages people to think of themselves as a label, “I’m INTP!”
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10. I’m an INFJ, according to this schema. But really the goal should be to bring all these elements together.
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11. In fairness to Myers-Briggs, their schema does describe how a person can bring together their different psychological functions into a whole in their lifetime. But it effectively functions as a tool for companies and individuals to pigeonhole themselves, becoming static.
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