让你们看看指着占星学爷爷喊迷信 拿粗糙无比的算命MBTI当科学
这到底是不是文盲 你们自己看看说错没有
Astrology and alchemy -- the occult roots of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)
The MBTI developed out of the interests of Katherine Cook Briggs (1875-1968) and her daughter Isabel Briggs Myers (1897-1979) in human personality difference. They both read Jung's Psychological Types shortly after its initial publication in English in 1923 and were prompted, at the outset of World War II, to try to 'operationalise' his typology. Early forms of the MBTI testing procedure were thus developed in the period 1942-44, but it was after the war and in the years leading up to 1956 that more systematic research involving medical students, nursing students and other sample occupations was conducted using the MBTI. Neither Briggs nor Myers had any formal training in psychology or statistics, so Myers' work with David Saunders, a psychology student, in the early 1950s was significant in terms of the subsequent development of the instrument.
Although the MBTI is often presented as a form of 'scientific psychology' par excellence, its Jungian origins mean that it has unconsciously inherited and reproduced concepts of astrological and alchemical cosmology. As Jung's analysis of personality derives conscious inspiration from his active interest in alchemy and astrology, contemporary users of the MBTI are inadvertently conducting a form of astrological character analysis.
(Peter Case, Garry Phillipson, European Business Forum, Spring, 2004, CBS Interactive Business Network Resource Library)
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