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The Personality Blueprint: From Letters to Functions
Part 1: The Four Dichotomies (The Surface Layer)
The four letters represent your preferences. Think of these as your "natural defaults."
1. [E | I] Energy Orientation (The Power Source)
Refers to where you direct your attention and how you recharge.
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Extroversion (E): Outwardly focused. Energy is gained through interaction and spent in solitude.
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Introversion (I): Inwardly focused. Energy is gained through solitude and spent during social interaction.
Note: This is a biological battery, not necessarily a measure of social skill.
2. [S | N] Information Gathering (The Data Collection)
Refers to what kind of data your brain prioritizes.
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Sensing (S): Focuses on "The What." Uses the five senses to observe concrete facts, details, and the present moment. (e.g., "The deer is breakdancing.")
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Intuition (N): Focuses on "The Why." Uses a "sixth sense" to see patterns, possibilities, and future implications. (e.g., "Where did the deer learn to dance?")
3. [T | F] Decision Making (The Data Processing)
Refers to the criteria you use when making a choice.
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Thinking (T): Objective. Prioritizes logic, consistency, and detached analysis. (e.g., "Does this work?")
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Feeling (F): Subjective. Prioritizes values, harmony, and the impact on people. (e.g., "How does this affect us?")
4. [J | P] Outer World Orientation (The Task Manager)
Refers to how you organize your life and deal with the external world.
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Judging (J): Prefers closure. Likes plans, schedules, and "settling" things. (e.g., Knowing what you want to eat before you get to the restaurant).
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Perceiving (P): Prefers openness. Likes spontaneity, flexibility, and keeping options available. (e.g., Browsing the menu at the table).
Part 2: The Cognitive Functions (The Engine Room)
While the letters are a great shorthand, the Functions describe the actual "software" running in your brain. There are 8 total, but each person primarily uses a "stack" of 4.
The Stack Hierarchy
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Dominant (Hero): Your strongest, most natural state. You do this without thinking.
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Auxiliary (Parent): Your growth function. It balances the Dominant and is how you help others.
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Tertiary (Child): Your "play" function. It feels creative but can be unstable or immature.
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Inferior (Aspiration): Your biggest weakness. Under stress, you might "fail" into this function (the "Grip").
Case Study: The "INxJ" Mirror
You and Smithy share the same "Bookends" but use different "Engines" for the outside world.
| Position | Function | INFJ (Counselor) | INTJ (Mastermind) | Role in the Brain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Dominant | Ni | Introverted Intuition | Introverted Intuition | The "Internal Radio" predicting the future. |
| 2. Auxiliary | F/T | Extroverted Feeling (Fe) | Extroverted Thinking (Te) | How you execute plans and talk to people. |
| 3. Tertiary | T/F | Introverted Thinking (Ti) | Introverted Feeling (Fi) | Your internal "logic check" or "value check." |
| 4. Inferior | Se | Extroverted Sensing | Extroverted Sensing | Your "clumsiness" or stress-induced overindulgence. |
Part 3: Deep Dive into "Ni" (Introverted Intuition)
As an INxJ, this is your primary mode of existence.
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The Synthesizer: Ni takes thousands of data points from the past and present (collected by your inferior Se) and collapses them into a single "hunch" or vision.
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The Future Focus: While a Sensor sees a fork and an outlet, Ni sees the result of the interaction before it happens.
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The NJ Factor: * N provides the abstract "What if?"
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J provides the drive for a singular conclusion ("This will happen").
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Result: A laser-focused, predictive mindset that is often 10 steps ahead but may miss what is right in front of its face.
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Part 4: Practical Interaction Guide
To communicate effectively, you must speak to a person's Auxiliary (2nd) Function, as that is their "handshake" with the world.
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Dealing with an INFJ (Fe-Aux): * Approach: Focus on shared goals, "we," and social harmony.
- Avoid: Being unnecessarily harsh or dismissive of human impact.
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Dealing with an INTJ (Te-Aux): * Approach: Focus on efficiency, data, and "what works."
- Avoid: Asking how they "feel" about a logical plan or wasting time with small talk.
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Dealing with an xSxP (Se-User):
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Approach: Give them something concrete to look at or do. Be direct.
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Avoid: Long-winded abstract theories without an immediate application.
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How to use these notes in Obsidian
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Tagging: Use
#mbti#psychologyand#cognitive-functions. -
Linking: If you mention "Harrison" or "Aiko," link their names
[[Aiko]]to a separate note where you track their suspected type and functions. -
Canvas: Use the Obsidian Canvas to map out the "opposite" relationships (Ni vs Se) visually.
Would you like me to draft a "Cheat Sheet" for the other 6 functions so you can start typing people like Aiko or Harrison more accurately?