John K
Donor
- MBTI
- INFJ
- Enneagram
- 5W4 549
Hi @TomasM - I've not listened to the videos you've posted yet because of their length but they sound interesting and I'm hoping to play them on our TV soon, rather than watch them on phone or computer.
On a more general note, at the level of depth you are working I think it's worth relating your relationship with the concept of Intuition to Jung's wider psychology of the whole psyche rather then just in the context of MBTI. That's because there is an apparent ambiguity in some of the contexts that needs some analysis and clarification, if only in terms of definitions and relationships to which model. Otherwise there is room for endless confusion about what is meant by intuition.
There is a lot of accreted stuff built on top of Jung's original model and I think it's worth going back to the roots. He created his theory of types in part in order to get to grips with problems he was having in his therapeutic practice. He was of course dealing with psychological illnesses that had their roots in the unconscious minds of his patients - but he found that one-size-fits-all methods did not work. This led to the development of his typology, initially as a means of finding the best route to patients' subconscious minds. It's fruit was the identification of their inferior functions which he saw as essentially unconscious, and as the bridge between the conscious and the unconscious. The personality differences expressed in typology led to very different approaches in how he dealt with a dominant introverted sensor compared with a dominant extraverted feeler, for example.
This is where it can get murky because for INFJs Ni is the dominant and Se is the inferior. So the path to the unconscious for us is extraverted sensing, and our most consciously controlled function is introverted intuition. Yet there is a view that suggests that Ni works in an unconscious sort of way. I think that this situation needs to be fleshed out in any analysis of Ni - and related to Jung's overall model of the human psyche if the analysis focuses on an MBTI concept of Ni. Personally I think that the problem arises because the terms are used too broadly. I find that I'm perfectly conscious of using Ni and the experience is analogous to using sight. Now sight appears to be a very concrete function with little in the way of being buried in the unconscious, but it's a matter of layers. There is a huge and complex process of turning the photons that hit my retina into my visual experience of the world out there, and this process is normally completely unconscious to me, though the experience is not. I think Ni works in the same way - there is an intricate subterranean process that delivers a nicely packaged insight to my conscious mind and I'm not aware of how it works, but like with sight I'm very conscious of the result. I don't think this is the same at all as saying than Ni is unconscious in the way that MBTI and Jungian psychology as a whole intends the meaning. It's a matter of layers and the unconscious layers of sight and dominant Ni are much lower down in out minds that the sort of embedding in our shadows that are implied by Jungian psychology.
Of course there are other possible definitions of what is meant by intuition, but I think it needs a precision in definition if those are analysed in order to avoid discussions that are confused by coming from different conceptual models.
On a more general note, at the level of depth you are working I think it's worth relating your relationship with the concept of Intuition to Jung's wider psychology of the whole psyche rather then just in the context of MBTI. That's because there is an apparent ambiguity in some of the contexts that needs some analysis and clarification, if only in terms of definitions and relationships to which model. Otherwise there is room for endless confusion about what is meant by intuition.
There is a lot of accreted stuff built on top of Jung's original model and I think it's worth going back to the roots. He created his theory of types in part in order to get to grips with problems he was having in his therapeutic practice. He was of course dealing with psychological illnesses that had their roots in the unconscious minds of his patients - but he found that one-size-fits-all methods did not work. This led to the development of his typology, initially as a means of finding the best route to patients' subconscious minds. It's fruit was the identification of their inferior functions which he saw as essentially unconscious, and as the bridge between the conscious and the unconscious. The personality differences expressed in typology led to very different approaches in how he dealt with a dominant introverted sensor compared with a dominant extraverted feeler, for example.
This is where it can get murky because for INFJs Ni is the dominant and Se is the inferior. So the path to the unconscious for us is extraverted sensing, and our most consciously controlled function is introverted intuition. Yet there is a view that suggests that Ni works in an unconscious sort of way. I think that this situation needs to be fleshed out in any analysis of Ni - and related to Jung's overall model of the human psyche if the analysis focuses on an MBTI concept of Ni. Personally I think that the problem arises because the terms are used too broadly. I find that I'm perfectly conscious of using Ni and the experience is analogous to using sight. Now sight appears to be a very concrete function with little in the way of being buried in the unconscious, but it's a matter of layers. There is a huge and complex process of turning the photons that hit my retina into my visual experience of the world out there, and this process is normally completely unconscious to me, though the experience is not. I think Ni works in the same way - there is an intricate subterranean process that delivers a nicely packaged insight to my conscious mind and I'm not aware of how it works, but like with sight I'm very conscious of the result. I don't think this is the same at all as saying than Ni is unconscious in the way that MBTI and Jungian psychology as a whole intends the meaning. It's a matter of layers and the unconscious layers of sight and dominant Ni are much lower down in out minds that the sort of embedding in our shadows that are implied by Jungian psychology.
Of course there are other possible definitions of what is meant by intuition, but I think it needs a precision in definition if those are analysed in order to avoid discussions that are confused by coming from different conceptual models.