Psychological Types
Psychologische Typen — Jung's 1921 systematic statement of his theory of personality, including the introversion-extraversion distinction
Tradition: Depth psychology / analytical psychology
The eight psychological types — Jung's 1921 systematic statement of his theory of personality, including the introversion-extraversion distinction
Psychological Types is Jung's major systematic statement of his theory of personality — the first major work of his independent analytical psychology after his 1912-13 break with Freud. The book develops Jung's theory of eight psychological types based on two intersecting distinctions: (1) introversion vs extraversion (the directional flow of psychic energy — inward toward the subjective, outward toward the objective), (2) four basic mental functions (thinking, feeling, sensation, intuition). Each person has a dominant function and a dominant orientation, yielding eight characteristic types. The book is most famous for introducing the introversion-extraversion distinction into popular psychology — though Jung's technical analysis is more complex than the popular reception suggests. The book has shaped subsequent personality psychology decisively (the MBTI is a direct descendant), broader depth psychology, and the popular cultural understanding of personality.
Author
Editions cited
- Psychological Types (R. F. C. Hull, Collected Works of C. G. Jung 6, Princeton, 1971)
- Psychologische Typen (Walter, 1921; subsequent editions)
School Embodiments
A complicated relation: Jung's analytical psychology has been engaged variously by analytic philosophy.
"Analytic engagement with Jungian psychology." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
The descriptive method has phenomenological structure — close attention to the lived structure of different personality types.
"Phenomenological description of personality types." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
Jung's framework is broadly naturalist — personality types as natural-psychological phenomena studied scientifically.
"Personality as natural-psychological phenomena." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
A working psychological realism: real personality types, really structuring psychological life.
"Real personality types structuring psychological life." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
Jung's working method is pragmatic-realist — testing psychological theory against actual clinical experience and historical-cultural patterns.
"Psychological theory tested against clinical and historical experience." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
Jung engages classical philosophy extensively — Plato, the Pythagorean four-fold framework, classical typology.
"Classical philosophical engagement." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
A complicated relation: Jung's framework has Kantian-idealist roots — the unconscious as the deeper psychological condition of consciousness.
"Kantian-idealist roots in the analysis of consciousness." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
A retrospective affinity: the developmental-dynamic analysis of personality has process-philosophical structure.
"Developmental-dynamic analysis of personality." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
A complicated relation: the systematic-rational classification has rationalist structure.
"Systematic-rational classification." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
A retrospective relation: subsequent liberal-theological engagement with Jungian psychology has been substantial.
"Liberal-theological engagement with Jung." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
A complicated relation: subsequent constructivist psychology has engaged Jungian typology critically.
"Constructivist engagement with Jungian typology." (Psychological Types, paraphrasing)
Internal Tensions
The 1912-13 break with Freud is the central biographical event behind Psychological Types — the book partly maps Jung's and Freud's typological difference. Subsequent personality psychology has substantially modified Jung's framework — Big Five replaced the Jungian-MBTI typology in scientific psychology, while MBTI has remained popularly influential. Jung's mystical-spiritual dimensions (developed more fully in subsequent works) remain controversial in scientific psychology.
I. Time
Developmental time of personality — types emerge through individuation.
Attributes
II. Space
The psychological space of the individuated person; the broader cultural space of typological patterns.
Attributes
III. Matter
Embodied psychological life as the substrate of typological differences.
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IV. Observer
The eight psychological types as varieties of observer — plural, embodied. The deeper Self as cosmic-ordering principle.
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V. Energy
The libido as psychic energy with directional flow (introversion-extraversion); the four functions as channels.
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VI. Information
The accumulating clinical and cultural-historical record of personality patterns.
Attributes
Personas that cite this work
Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How Psychological Types resolves each dilemma
51 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 3 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 6 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.