Marlowe Embree
27 / Culture and Cultural Typology / Personal Development, Health, and Spirituality
Tags: atheism, aut-aut, auxiliary, C. S. Lewis, causes, Christianity, convergence, Daniel Kahneman, divergence, diversity, dominant, ecumenical, egalitarianism, et-et, Feeling, Intuition, Islam, Judaism, Leonardo De Chirico, Maimonides, Marlowe Embree, mysticism, pluralism, polarization, Pope Francis, Quran, rationalism, reasons, relativism, religion, Richard Dawkins, Ruth Benedict, science, Sensation, spirituality, theology, thinking, tolerance, triumphalism
April 6, 2016

People of different types are prone to think about religion and spirituality in different ways. While type obviously does not determine a person’s religious beliefs, type is a lens through which one views the world of religion and spirituality, and as a result, contentious religious differences are often, in part, typological differences in disguise.
Continue Reading...
Angelina Bennet
04 / Counseling, Coaching, and Psychotherapy
Tags: Angelina Bennet, Briggs, collective unconscious, creativity, enneagram, extraverted intuition (Ne), Feeling, inferior function, INFJ, introverted intuition (Ni), Jung, Myers, persona, projection, psychodynamic coaching, Sensation, shadow, thinking, transcendent function, type dynamics
March 1, 2011

Some people can be over-identified with the persona and experience inauthenticity. This identification with the persona can be due to habituation, social pressures, influences from childhood, defensiveness or anything that has given the individual a message indicating that the character of the persona is a preferable way to be.
Continue Reading...
Philippe De Sainte Maresville
02 / Research, Theory, and History / Teaching and Learning Styles
Tags: Benziger, Broca's area, Feeling, handedness, ISFP, neuroscience, Philippe De Sainte Maresville, Sensation
November 15, 2010

Do you know people who tend to confuse left and right?—Not that they don’t know where their left and right is, but they mix up the words. Generally, if you ask them for directions you will notice that their hands point the correct way but their words don’t. The words right and left come out incorrectly, with no logic.
Continue Reading...