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I also use the male/female dichotomie, and I can do that one solely with the use of VI.
I should really move this to Alternative Socionics Theories because the fifteen dichotomies expressed here are the Reinin dichotomies.
Just move it if you like. But Reinin dichotomies were considered a discovery by Augusta so they are standard socionics in a way...
The result is quite interesting. There are people who don't even use the Jungian foundation ?!?!?
Someone thinks that extroversion/introversion is NOT a useful dichotomy ?!?!?
I don't want to argue the point particularly, but I don't think the Reinin dichotomies stand up on their own in the same way that the original Model A theory does, and at best they are perhaps an easier way of defining particular aspects relevant to certain types.
In my opinion most Reinin dichotomies are rather useless. Both Ganin and DeLong think so. Paradoxically, Augusta considered them a discovery...
I hope that more people will vote so that we get to know if there are Reinin dichotomies which are useful. Static/dynamic seems to be a candidate...
"discovery" can mean many things. In her case, it may merely have meant that the dichotomies were unproven but were of some interest.
Of the true Reinin dichotomies, I probably only use Static\Dynamic, and maybe Merry\Serious, in regards to Socionics. If I use the others, it is to a much lesser degree.
Theory of the Reinin Dichotomies - Wikisocion
There are so many English-speaking people who are interested in socionics...
Why is there not even one native speaker who could make a readable text out of this disaster? Maybe I could improve the text a bit but I'm not a native speaker so I'm not a good man for this job...
I don't really use dichotomies, because they just are not as definining to a personality type. One's dominant function and quadra values are especially defining (but these aren't defining when certain people butcher them with their horrid understandings). I do use the traditional four in some instances, especially introvert and extrovert. That one is the most obvious and divides the information elements in half, like J/P does.
Quadra to IM is the easiest type method. First pick a quadra (4). Then pick an IM (4).
It's not the most accurate though. The most accurate is definitely IM to Quadra (though most of the time it won't matter). Sometimes I'm unsure about quadra but very sure about dominant IM.
I tend to use the type dichotomies according to their function-position meanings; the function dichotomies are more interesting to me. Of those, I tend to use Strong/Weak, Inert/Contact, Valued/Subdued and Bold/Cautious (which is my name for Strong/Weak XOR Inert/Contact XOR Valued/Subdued).
I changed my mind.
Now I am of the opinion that all Reinin dichotomies are useful to explain certain things...
They are not useful for beginners and not a good method for typing but they have a lot of explanatory power if understood properly...
I think no dichotomies should be used because they trap fluid personalities into tight binaries. Instead of a trait being apparent, you use this "either or" and force someone into the binary, even when it when it's not relevant to the person.
I have no idea what those things are.
how do you "use" a dichotomy?
Then socionics is no good for you. If you don't use dichotomies you can useQuote:
Originally Posted by loo.to.the.sky
- Model A. Then you have to decide: :Ti:-valuer or :Te:-valuer? It's also dichotomous...
- clubs and temperaments. Then you have to decide: Researcher or pragmatist? Melancholic or phlegmatic? It's also dichotomous...
- type descriptions. Then you have to decide: Analyst or Critic? It's also dichotomous...
What do you mean? You hopefully don't mean that you have never heard of the Reinin dichotomies... :rolleyes:
Actually, I can use Socionics because I don't apply it to personalities, I apply it to thought-processes. So yes, I don't use clubs, temperaments, type descriptions, none of that stuff. Because it is deciding something that can't be, Socionics can't predict personality traits, it sets out to determine your thought-process which in turn affects your personality, but does not cause it, since there is a multitude of other prominent facts that affect it as well.
I only use two things: IEs and Functions :D Which everyone should use as a base, by the least, but I've decided the best way to type is ONLY by these, because the moment you start to take short-cuts is the moment you take ingenuity away from the person. The IEs and Functions are applicable to me because they don't say anything about someone's personality, and, are only binary if you apply them as "either-or" instead of thinking "I think :Ne: is the leading function, which would make :Ni: ignoring to fit in logically." and then investigate to see if :Ne: and :Ni: manifest correctly in these placements rather than "Which do they value?" as you are pigeonholing them into certain behaviors and ignoring the whole.
There are two readable versions: one created by Snegledmaca, the other by RMcNew (currently called Angel von Himmer if I recall correctly). A forum search should be able to retrieve these.Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnDo
I use rational/irrational (although critical of the common interpretation of it), static/dynamic, introvert/extrovert, ethics/logics, merry/serious, reasonable/resolute, intuitive/sensing, process/result, positive/negative and (since recently) taciturn/narrator, in order of ascribed importance.
It is intentional that I rate the dichotomies related to J functions as more influential than those related to P functions.
The remaining dichotomies are bogus and are detrimental to one's understanding of socionics. They can be used, for example, to defend the position that conflictors are very similar to eachother. Without the firmly established verdict that some pairs of types are more similar to each other than others, the ability to tell types apart has no hopes of remaining standing. If one believes in the dichotomies at all, one has to admit that whatever property they describe has only a very weak effect on what the person is like.
Sorry to break this to you, but these things are dichotomies like any other:Quote:
I only use two things: IEs and Functions
Ti = merry, logic, static
Fi = serious, ethics, static
Te = serious, logic, dynamic
Fe = merry, ethics, dynamic
Si = reasonable, sensing, dynamic
Ni = resolute, intuitive, dynamic
Se = resolute, sensing, static
Ne = reasonable, intuitive, static
You're already using the dichotomies in your head.
I use all 512 of them, but I use asking/declaring and optimist/pessimist as a last resort as to me they are the least understood Reinin traits within the symmetric structure of the socion :thumbsup:
They didn't arrive as dichotomies, they were broken up into dichotomies. Merry, logic, and static, for example, didn't exist as variables before :Ti: did. :Ti: did and then was broken down into dichotomies for easier explanations and use. And if we want to get nit picky on it all, sure, there are technical dichotomies in the system, but they aren't used as short hand for the actual information, and don't cut out pieces from the bigger picture. To be clear, I don't use dichotomies as short-cuts to type people, which is what the question was referring to, and ultimately, what dichotomies are used for.