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Last edited by Hays; 05-30-2011 at 08:14 AM.
quadra values usually help a lot, autocrat/democrat is usually easy to spot too...process/asking/positivist/constructivist/tactical/farsighted/yielding really give a better perspective on the psychology of each type but are not as useful for typing (though they can be)
Most of the Reinin dichotomies are consistent with LII for me, but I still am skeptical of it being used as a typing method because I've seen too people for whom it doesn't work well for. I think the quadra value ones and static/dynamic are most useful.
LII-Ne with strong EII tendencies, 6w7-9w1-3w4 so/sp/sx, INxP
The null / non-null dichotomy works consistently IME.
Karnaugh map listens to previous posters and says...
Use quadra, temperament and club separately; don't mix them!
Quadra triple:
-Merry/Serious
-Judicious/Decisive
-Aristocrat/Democrat
Temperament triple:
-Rational/Irrational
-Extratim/Introtim
-Static/Dynamic
Club triple:
-Sensing/Intuitive
-Thinking/Feeling
-Aristocrat/Democrat
EDIT: Specifically, the Karnaugh map came up with the rule that a dichotomy is useful if is ignores temperament OR ignores club OR is either Merry/Serious or Judicious/Decisive. I used the four Jungian dichotomies as the four variables for the map.
Last edited by Brilliand; 08-20-2010 at 02:05 AM.
LII-Ne
"Come to think of it, there are already a million monkeys on a million typewriters, and the Usenet is NOTHING like Shakespeare!"
- Blair Houghton
Johari
There is a secret fourth triple:
Negative/Postive
Process/Result
Static/Dynamic
AKA thought style.
"Correct" might be a bit subjective here, but I think it can go either way. I think people can type themselves as various types using different dichotomies, and I, personally, don't find the Reinin system to be as realistically applicable, it comes across as too externally observationally focused
EII INFj
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