The solution is to throw out function order, and to make sure not to use MBTI as a predictive tool. Only adjectives.
There are two ways you can throw out the function order. Claim that there is only one function. (Pretend that other functions do not exist).
Or proclaim the following absurdity, the members of each pair of functions and attitudes are not antithetical to each other, extroversion and introversion, sensation and intuition, thinking and feeling, judgment and perception. (I have already explained thoroughly elsewhere why they are antithetical.
Principles of Typology)
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The axioms of Junging typology are as follows.
Axiom 1: 8 Functions and 2 attituded exist.
Axiom 2: For every function and an attitude that exists, there is another function or an attitude that is antithetical to such a function.
Axiom 3: Because the system contains an antithesis to each function, no two functions can have an equal amount of natural influence. This is the case because if the two antithetical functions in question had an equal amount of influence, cognitive paralysis would ensue. Or quite simply one would not be able to think in any particular way at all.
The entailment of axioms 2 and 3 is that all of the functions must be placed in a specific order. There will be a function that is the most prevalent of all, therefore the function that is an antithesis to that function would be the most supressed. Then there will be a function that is the second most prevalent of all, and the antithesis to that function will be the second most supressed of all. What I have described above is the model for the order of functions.
Thinking/Feeling is certainly a false dichotomy.
Function theory gets around the binary distinction..
MBTI types are merely adjectives, like calling someone shy. They should only be descriptive, not predictive, and not based on ability...
In MBTI, a Thinker is one who is more comfortable using logic than relying on emotions for decision making. In Jungian typology a Thinker is one who has a stronger natural disposition towards dispassionate judgment than processing of emotion. This often entails a personality trait described by MBTI, but does not necessitate it. What this means is that a Feeler is less likely to be logical than a Thinker, but it is possible for a Feeler to be more logical than a Feeler. Humans, unlike animals have the ability to do differently from what their instincts or dispositions urge them to do. Hence, we can do contrary to our typological dispositions and develop a function that we have a weaker natural disposition towards using more than the function that we have a stronger natural disposition towards using.
But INFJ implies that you use Fe more than Ti. Neither type is a particularly good description of your function usage. ...
In MBTI it does, in Jungian typology it does not.
I'm more logical than almost anyone I've known besides my INTP father.)
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I don't know about that, you do utter many absurdities.
