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The theory of psychological type comes from Swiss psychiatrist
Carl G. Jung (1875-1961) who wrote that what appears to be
random behavior is actually the result of differences in the way
people prefer to use their mental capacities. He observed
that people generally engage in one of two mental functions:
- taking in information, which he called perceiving,
or
- organizing information and coming to conclusions, which he
called judging.
Within each of these, Jung saw people preferring to perform that
function in one of two ways. These are called preferences.
He also noted that, although everyone takes in information and
makes decisions, some people prefer to do more taking in information
(perceiving) and others prefer to do more decision making (judging).
Finally, Jung observed, Each person seems to be energized
more by either the external world (extraversion) or the internal
world (introversion). What Jung called a persons psychological
type consists of his or her preference in each category.
In 1921, Jung published Psychological Types, introducing
the idea that each person has a psychological type. The academic
language of the book made it hard to read and so few people could
understand and use the ideas for practical purposes.
During World War II, two American women, Isabel
Briggs Myers and her mother Katharine Cook Briggs, set out
to find an easier way for people to use Jungs ideas in everyday
life. They wanted people to be able to identify their psychological
types without having to sift through Jungs academic theory.
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