Introduction To Socionics - Classic Socionics
Introduction To Socionics - Classic Socionics
Introduction to Socionics
Written by Sophia | Axiom
Based on Aushra Augusta’s work
In this write-up I will attempt to rectify these issues and introduce readers to the
fundamentals of socionics gradually. I will aim to make it thorough but easy to
understand even for those who have no pre-existing knowledge of socionics,
information metabolism or Jung. And, most importantly, the introduction will be
based on Augusta’s work: I will include her own explanations and definitions,
providing context for them if necessary, and in my own writing I will do my best to
:
avoid deviating from what I have read from her. I will also link my translations of
Augusta’s lengthier pieces of writing in appropriate places, and I strongly
recommend you to read the contents of the link whenever you encounter one.
Before you read the main body of the introduction, please note that the validity of
socionics remains to be proven, but for the purposes of this work I will operate
under the assumption that it is valid to simplify my explanations. My goal is not to
present socionics as fact, but to give a comprehensive overview of it as it is
outlined by its creator. If you see me assert something, take it as “this is true if
Augusta’s theory of socionics accurately reflects life” rather than “this is factually
true”, as I do not consider myself qualified to confidently claim the latter (see
disclaimer at the top of this page).
Index
1. What is Socionics?
2. Information Metabolism Elements
3. Ego Block
4. Model A
5. Blocks and Functions
6. Intertype Relations
7. Miscellaneous
List of Augusta’s works
1. What is Socionics?
Socionics is a psychological theory proposing that different people process
information in fundamentally different ways. According to socionics, each person
belongs to a specific type that determines this way of processing information, and
each type has its own strengths, weaknesses and blind spots.
The concept of information metabolism (IM) comes from the work of a Polish
psychiatrist Antoni Kepinski (1918-1972), who defined it as “the exchange of
signals with the environment, i.e. receiving stimuli from the environment and
responding to them” [A. Kepinski, Psychopathology of Neuroses]. This is meant to
parallel energy metabolism (EM) – the process of generating energy from
nutrients, although the definition of EM used by Kepinski (and subsequently
Augusta) also seemed to include the process of expending energy on obtaining
these nutrients from the environment. In other words, while energy metabolism is
the exchange of energy with the environment, information metabolism is the
exchange of information, which includes its processing by the human mind.
New stimuli constantly affect the organism, and under their influence new
:
New stimuli constantly affect the organism, and under their influence new
reactions constantly happen in the organism. These reactions become
signals that are sent into the environment. […]
Just as only certain forms of the environment’s energy can be used and
transformed in an idiosyncratic way by a given organism, so too only
certain signals from the environment are accentuated by the organism
and stacked in a specific way created by this organism, leading to specific
experiences and specific forms of reaction. […]
The organism must be constantly provided with new signals from the
external world, and it must constantly produce new forms of reactions.
However, in this constant variability of information metabolism the
organism cannot go beyond its specific structure. The received and sent
signals must be new, but not completely new: they cannot transgress the
specific structure of a given organism. Just as each organism builds its own
specific protein, so too it builds its own specific forms out of incoming
signals. In the external world these forms manifest as signals sent to the
environment. Everything that does not fit the structure is not accepted at
all and does not appear in the organism.
Antoni Kepinski, Psychopathology of Neuroses
Note: the structure Kepinski refers to does not seem to be the same thing as socionic
type, even though they are most likely connected. In particular, Kepinski describes
his structure as constantly changing, stating that “each external signal … changes
the structure of signal metabolism in some way, simultaneously enriching it“, but
that the signals “must, to a degree, fit this structure” in order to be accepted. What I
consider the most important takeaway from all this is the idea that the way we
perceive information is dependent on something internal, and that this internal
structure prevents certain informational signals from reaching us. This idea is at the
core of socionics, as you will see later.
If you are interested in learning more about information metabolism, on this page I
compiled my translations of several fragments from Kepinski’s works discussing it.
To the reader I offer a typology that was created by Carl Gustav Jung and
slightly improved by me using A. Kepinski’s theory of information
metabolism. This typology makes it possible to view each individual as a
bearer of a specific social function, which is determined by the type of
their personality, or intelligence. The type of intelligence determines how
the individual perceives information from the external world, and the kind
of selection they subject this information to. This conditions their ability to
give attention to different aspects of external life: the individual’s interests,
aspirations, the direction of their behavior and attitude towards other
people.
Aushra Augusta, The Model of Information Metabolism
Jung’s psychic types are the types of cognition, or intelligence. But it would
:
Jung’s psychic types are the types of cognition, or intelligence. But it would
probably be easiest to call them types of IM, since the main difference
between the types of people lies in their exchange of information with the
external world.
Aushra Augusta, Commentary on Jung’s Typology and Introduction to Information
Metabolism
This difference in cognition and perception is one of the reasons why people may
have different motivations and intentions behind the same words and actions, and
why “the same words and intonations can tell different people different things”
[2]. Augusta considered this to be the main source of conflicts between individuals
belonging to different types of IM, with some types being more favorable than
others in terms of communication for any given type. For example, in her paper On
the Dual Nature of Humanity Augusta wrote that as a result of their type some
people “express their thoughts in a way that is obscure and unacceptable to us”
[1].
The same words mean different things when coming from different types
of IM. Let us look at the simplest word “no,” said with the same intonation
and in the same situation. From one person it means irrevocable
determination. The other says “no” because they think saying something
else in this situation would be impolite. The third wants to scan the
situation, check their interlocutor’s intentions. The fourth would get
offended if no one argues with them after they said this word, etc. This is
type-related! Not to mention that there are also differences caused by
social status, upbringing, temperament, etc.
Aushra Augusta, Socion, or The Foundations of Socionics
What one type of IM calls “love”, what makes them feel loved and
respected, another type may consider evidence of a lack of feelings.
Aushra Augusta, On the Dual Nature of Humanity
As was mentioned before, each type has weaknesses and blind spots. Therefore,
in order to thrive each person needs to receive the missing information from other
people, and this information needs to be presented in a form that allows the
person in question to grasp it naturally and comfortably. Augusta believed that the
sixteen types can be divided into eight dyads and that the types in each dyad have
complementary ways of processing and sharing information, which makes them
able to fulfill this need for each other just by communicating in ways that are
natural to them. Such types are called duals, and in terms of information transfer
they are optimal for each other.
Here you can read Augusta’s description of duality in more detail. Most of it
should be easy to understand, and even though it does mention a couple of
concepts you might not yet be familiar with, the mentions are fairly brief. As for
our introductory section, I believe by now you must have an overall idea of what
socionics is, which means we can start looking at its actual content.
It turns out that the human psyche divides the surrounding world into
certain components, or aspects. Each type of personality receives very
differentiated information about one of these aspects, and they are very
conscious of this information. At the same time, their perception of
information about other aspects is undifferentiated, compressed. […] To
fulfill their own needs the individual needs to have an idea about the
entire surrounding reality. In their service of society people cooperate.
According to our current understanding, the mechanism of this
cooperation is relatively simple: individual aspects of the world are
reflected in the brain with different degrees of differentiation and
awareness. Some aspects are only used by the individual themself;
information about the other aspects is transmitted to society by the
individual. The former are reflected in a relatively general way,
remembered as images, experience and skills. The latter are perceived in a
differentiated way, with more precision that allows the individual to
consciously comprehend the information and verbally share it.
Aushra Augusta, On the Dual Nature of Humanity
Another change in the terminology was the renaming of thinking to logic and
feeling to ethics.
We do not assert that our terms are perfect and could not be replaced
with anything more fitting, but they are more accurate than Jung’s. For
example, when C.G. Jung counterposes the thinking types to the feeling
types, it gives the impression that the former “think” and the latter “live by
emotions”. However, in actuality they both think, but they think about
different things: the former think about the objective in the surrounding
world, and the latter – about the subjective. Because of this, if we say of
the latter: “their thinking is predominantly ethical”, it will not sound as
nonsensical as if we said: “their thinking is predominantly emotional”.
Aushra Augusta, On the Dual Nature of Humanity
Note: the usage of T and F is counter-intuitive, since the correct socionic terms are
“logic” and “ethics” rather than “thinking” and “feeling”. The two-letter codes are
originally from another Jung-based typology called MBTI, and because MBTI does
retain the terms “thinking” and “feeling”, the codes reflect that. Most English-
speaking typology communities learned of MBTI before socionics, and when they
transitioned to socionics, they kept using the codes they grew accustomed to.
Below I provide definitions of the elements from two different sources, along with
the symbols assigned to each element. There is a third, more in-depth set of
definitions too, which can be read here.
The object’s content. The object’s potential energy, internal content and
structure, internal capabilities. The program embedded in the object. Any
concrete abilities of a person. What Karl Marx called “labour power”, i.e. the
aggregate of the individual’s physical and mental capabilities.
A sense of whether hidden internal abilities and capabilities are present.
This sense makes it possible to tell whether an object or phenomenon is
permanent or short-lived.
Aushra Augusta, The Meaning of Symbols Used in Socionics
Note: Karl Marx introduced the concept of “labour power” in his work Capital (vol. 1, ch.
6), as follows: “By labour-power or capacity for labour is to be understood the aggregate
of those mental and physical capabilities existing in a human being, which he exercises
whenever he produces a use-value of any description. […] Labour-power, however,
becomes a reality only by its exercise; it sets itself in action only by working.”
:
Introverted Intuition (Ni)
Time. Both objective time and the object’s subjective time. The duration of
the object’s functioning or existence, which is determined by its potential
energy and the expenditure of this energy per unit of time. The object’s
external situation among other objects, i.e. its situation in time. Time
intervals between events, the duration of specific events, the sequence of
events and processes, their rhythm in time, quickness and slowness. All of
this applies to external as well as internal processes.
A sense of whether something is timely, of hurry or lack thereof, etc. A
sense of where the current events are positioned in time relative to other
events.
Aushra Augusta, The Meaning of Symbols Used in Socionics
The object’s form. The object’s kinetic energy, its readiness to expend its
:
The object’s form. The object’s kinetic energy, its readiness to expend its
energy. Its external qualities – color, outline, smoothness or roughness of
its surface. External mobilization. A person’s will, their ability and readiness
to use their will on themself and others.
A sense of whether the object is ready to exercise its will, to show its
strength, whether the object is aesthetic.
Aushra Augusta, The Meaning of Symbols Used in Socionics
Note: In my translations of Augusta’s definitions of Si, the phrase “how the person feels”,
as well as the word “state”, are both an adaptation of the Russian word “самочувствие”.
This word is not fully translatable and is defined as “a general mental indicator of the
physical and spiritual state of the individual at any given moment; consists of specific
sensations and general feelings”.
State. The internal situation of the object among other objects, the way
other objects affect the object’s state and are reflected in this state. You
could call it a “revebration” of the space within the object. The state is
conditioned by both external and internal processes.
A sense of whether something is pleasant, and of physical and aesthetic
satisfaction and dissatisfaction.
Aushra Augusta, The Meaning of Symbols Used in Socionics
The use of kinetic energy. Through this element the individual receives
:
The use of kinetic energy. Through this element the individual receives
information about the activity of the object and subject, and their ability
to work.
Aushra Augusta, On the Dual Nature of Humanity
Internal processes. Internal processes that are hidden from view, often
revealing themselves through sounds that come from within the object, or
through the object changing its appearance (e.g. reddening of the face).
For people this ranges from emotional experiences to digestion.
Emotional states, moods, excitation, depression.
A sense of whether inner impulses are ethical, and whether it is possible to
change something that is happening within oneself or another object.
Aushra Augusta, The Meaning of Symbols Used in Socionics
Note: the term “object” in this context means any entity that can be distinguished
from other entites. For example, it can be a rock, an animal, a person, a clothing item,
or even a specific idea or concept.
RATIONAL. The rational is the reasonable, that which accords with reason.
I conceive reason as an attitude (q.v.) whose principle it is to conform
thought, feeling, and action to objective values. Objective values are
established by the everyday experience of external facts on the one hand,
and of inner, psychological facts on the other. […] Most objective values—
and reason itself—are firmly established complexes of ideas handed down
through the ages.
C.G. Jung, Psychological Types
Jung’s rational functions also get called judging, and the irrational ones get called
perceiving. However, Augusta disagreed with this distinction, stating:
Jung divided all functions into rational, judging (thinking, feeling) and
:
Jung divided all functions into rational, judging (thinking, feeling) and
irrational, perceiving (sensation, intuition). When we tested it, it turned out
that all information metabolism elements, be they rational or irrational, …
“perceive” as well as “judge”, and which activity outweighs the other
depends only on the position occupied by the element…
Aushra Augusta, Commentary on Jung’s Typology and Introduction to Information
Metabolism
Unfortunately, I could not find Augusta’s own definition of this dichotomy. Based
on my reading of her materials, I would define it in the following way: irrational
elements (sensation and intuition) cover information about what the objects are
and how their existence and state depend on each other, while rational elements
(logic and ethics) cover information about what the objects do, how they change,
and how they compare and relate to each other.
Finally, the third major dichotomy is static-dynamic, and, once again, Augusta did
not provide a straightforward definition I could quote. Here is my own: dynamic
elements (Si, Ni, Te and Fe) cover information about everything that is
characterized by a change, an interaction, or a movement, while static elements
(Se, Ne, Ti and Fi) cover the kind of information that is unchanging – either “outside
of time”, or “frozen in time”, the “state of affairs” in any given moment. The table
below illustrates all three of the element dichotomies.
3. Ego Block
:
Each IME occupies its own unique position in our psyche, and the nature of this
position determines our perception of and relationship with the information about
the corresponding aspect. For example, it determines how detailed the information
is, whether we are consciously aware of it or not, how confident we are in our
usage of this information, how we prefer to discuss it with others, and whether we
tend to synthesize new information of the same nature.
The positions occupied by the IMEs are called functions. There are eight of them,
one for each IME, and together they form what is known as model A (A for
Augusta). You can visualize model A as a box with eight empty sections
(functions). You place your eight items (IMEs) in this box, one item per section, and
after you are done there are no empty sections or unplaced items left. However,
there is a caveat – the items must be placed in accordance with certain rules,
which limits the number of possible combinations to sixteen. This is exactly how
the sixteen types of information metabolism are formed.
In the next section we will examine the structure of model A in more detail, but for
now let us focus on two functions out of eight – the leading (or base) and the
creative. These two functions form the individual’s Ego block, or simply Ego. Each
combination of the leading and the creative is unique, so knowing someone’s Ego
is enough to determine their type.
Note: the other six functions are separated into three more blocks, which we will
talk about in section 5.
The individual is conscious of the information covered by their Ego while also
having a very nuanced, in-depth understanding of it [2, 5, 11]. It is the information
we can work with most effectively, which is why the Ego largely determines the
way we approach various problems and challenges.
[In their realization of the Ego block] the individual is bold and fearless.
They always know and are certain that they can find a solution, and they
even like difficult situations. The individual achieves a lot on their Ego
because this is where their conscious will is realized.
Aushra Augusta, The Characteristic of SLI
Before I said that all eight functions are unique. Despite being in the same block,
the leading and the creative also have a number of differences, which is why it is
important to examine them individually. For this I will again turn to Augusta
herself.
The first element of the leading Ego block [leading] seems to match what
:
The first element of the leading Ego block [leading] seems to match what
German psychologist O. Selz called “reproductive thinking” in the 1920s,
while the second element [creative] matches what he called “productive
thinking”. With reproductive thinking the individual reproduces previously
received information and uses it in new conditions. This form of thinking
broadens the individual’s knowledge about the application of information
they have acquired. The essence of productive thinking is in producing
information that is completely new for the subject themself. The result of
such thinking provides the individual with something they did not know
before.
One might wonder why the first, most developed function, which we will
call “accepting”, matches reproductive rather than productive thinking. This
is because the most important thing for a living being is to not lose its
contact with objective reality. If information received by the first,
accepting function was not exceptionally stable and objective, the
individual would not have enough competence to ensure quality control
of the next function’s product.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Intertype Relations
The [leading] function is the one the individual is most consciously aware
of. The element that fulfils this function occupies a special place in the
psyche. It is used creatively, and its usage is always accompanied by a
noticeable sense of satisfaction. Everything related to the functioning of
this element is controlled by the consciousness. If I took a specific action,
arrived at a particular conclusion, or had a certain thought, it means that
there was a good reason for it, that behaving differently in this situation
would be wrong, unjustified, groundless. People are never shy about
anything caused by their [leading], reproductive function. In this area the
individual can still argue, agree with others, or make concessions, but they
never feel uncomfortable, constrained or humiliated. The [leading]
function is self-sufficient and creative, it does not depend on other
people’s pressuring. It is always open to any new objective arguments, but
never makes concessions solely based on others’ desires or perceptions. It
tends to give directives and take a leadership role, and is not at all inclined
to accept unconvincing or unclear instructions. It is similar to this
expression: “I either teach, or learn myself”. At the same time, if others’
:
perception of something related to the individual’s [leading] function is
different or incorrect, the individual may find it surprising or even funny,
but it does not cause anger or outrage. Freedom of thought and action is
recognized for everyone.
The [creative] function is more creative, less balanced, more interested in
prestige, more prone to working “for the audience”. People are never shy
about it, but there is a noticeable tendency to “show off”, to “shine”, to use
it as a universal tool. Quite often the creative function is even somewhat
speculative or coquettish. There is a desire to attract attention, to show
one’s strength and abilities, to surprise and amaze. This seems to be linked
to the fact that, while the [leading] function is utilized to connect with the
objective world, the [creative] function is intended to create something
new for one’s own and others’ benefit, something that is meant to attract,
amaze and bring joy. These creations are the individual’s conclusions,
decisions and artistic works, and they require a positive evaluation.
In this area we see a striving for pronounced independence. We see
stubbornness, intransigence, and less acceptance of alternative viewpoints
than the [leading] function shows. There is less humor in relation to the
“opponents” (those who have different views and are acting in “incorrect”
ways), and more of a tendency to challenge them. Evaluations such as
“good – bad”, “intelligent – stupid”, “honest – dishonest”, “beautiful – ugly”
are all labels that are selected based on the content or specialization of
the evaluating individual’s [creative] function. Interestingly, each individual
usually evaluates one, and only one, of other people’s qualities.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Intertype Relations
Note: by “evaluating one, and only one, of other people’s qualities” Augusta probably
meant that there is only one primary quality by which people tend to evaluate others, and
what exactly this quality is is conditioned by the creative.
The leading and the creative share the static-dynamic dichotomy, but they do not
share extraverted-introverted and rational-irrational. Let us look at Ne as an
example; Ne is static, extraverted and irrational. This means that if someone is Ne
leading, their creative must be static, introverted and rational. Only two elements,
Ti and Fi, fit this criteria, resulting in two Ne leading sociotypes: Ne-Ti and Ne-Fi.
For the same reason there are also two sociotypes with Ne as the creative: Ti-Ne
:
and Fi-Ne. In fact, for each function-element combination there are precisely two
types that have it. This is why there are sixteen sociotypes: for each of the eight
IMEs there are two types with it as the leading, two with it as the creative, and so
on.
The way the types are usually called in socionics is based on the type’s leading
and creative functions. It consists of three words which are as follows:
For example, the Ne-Ti type would be called intuitive logical extravert, or ILE for
short; the Fi-Se type would be called ethical sensoric introvert, or ESI for short;
and so on.
If you know the name of type, you can easily identify its leading and creative. Let
us look at the LSE type as an example; the first and second letter are L and S,
which means the LSE is leading in logic and creative in sensation. The third letter
is E, so we know their leading is extraverted, which also means their creative is
introverted based on the rules I outlined above. This leaves us with only one
option for what the LSE’s Ego block could be: Te-Si.
Below is a table that shows the shortened names of all types along with their
respective leading and creative functions.
ILE SEI LII ESE IEI SLE EIE LSI ILI SEE LIE ESI IEE SLI
Leading Ne Si Ti Fe Ni Se Fe Ti Ni Se Te Fi Ne Si
Creative Ti Fe Ne Si Fe Ti Ni Se Te Fi Ni Se Fi Te
Note: because ethical and extravert share their first letter, as do intuitive and
introvert, at first this naming convention may feel confusing. Just remember that if
the letter comes first or second, it refers to the domain, and if it comes third, it refers
:
to vertness.
Note: Augusta usually used the terms “schizothyme” and “cyclothyme” instead of
(respectively) “rational type” and “irrational type”. These terms are based on the
book of a German psychiatrist Ernst Kretschmer (1888-1964) Physique and
Character, and refer to two distinct temperaments. Augusta believed there is a direct
connection between Kretschmer’s and Jung’s systems, and that schizothymes are
rational types while cyclothymes are irrational [12].
There are more dichotomies that apply to types, however. Because of the way
type is constructed all types necessary have one irrational and one rational
element in their Ego; the rational element determines whether the type is logical
or ethical, and the irrational one – whether it is sensoric or intuitive. For example,
:
ILI is intuitive and logical while ESE is sensoric and ethical. Like with the other
three dichotomies, there are Augusta’s descriptions of sensoric-intuitive and
logical-ethical that I encourage you to read for yourself.
In the first section we established that there are pairs of types, called duals,
whose thinking naturally complements each other. Sensation complements
intuition, logic complements ethics, extraversion complements introversion and
static thinking complements dynamic thinking, so these are all the dichotomies
duals do not share (they do, however, share the rational-irrational dichotomy) [1].
For example, the EIE type is intuitive, ethical, extraverted and dynamic, which
means their dual must be sensoric, logical, introverted and static. Only the LSI fits
this description.
Note: in this context inductive most likely means static, and deductive – dynamic.
4. Model A
In this section we will examine the way model A is structured, which is based on
the idea of information flow.
:
Augusta believed that, rather than being completely independent, the functions
are connected into two rings, with the information flowing between the functions
of each ring in a predetermined direction [2]. This means that, in addition to the
external information, each function also receives some observations or conclusions
from the function that comes before it in the ring. Below is a basic illustration of
the way this looks.
The ring containing the Ego block is called active or mental. We are consciously
aware of the information we receive through the elements of our mental ring, and
because of this we can put it to words. The same cannot be said about the
information from the other ring, called passive or vital. We can still use this
information for our own needs, but we are not consciously aware of it and cannot
convey it to others verbally.
Not all signals received and sent by the organism reach its consciousness.
:
Not all signals received and sent by the organism reach its consciousness.
There are stimuli that fall below the threshold of sensitivity, that are
assimilated by the nervous system but do not activate it to such an extent
that it would cause a reaction of the consciousness, even though these
stimuli still influence the organism’s activity in some way. There are also
signals that the organism forms and transmits to the environment
automatically, without it being noted by the consciousness, because due
to constant repetition and reinforcement these signals only activate the
part of the signaling system that is needed for the realization of this
specific function; thus they remain beyond consciousness.
Antoni Kepinski, Melancholy
The active ring comprehends the information, moves it from the first to
the second signal system, and shares it with other members of society.
The outputted information is controlled. Apart from rare cases of
pathology, the individual says and shows only what they want to say and
show. […]
The passive ring stores information it receives as experience, abilities and
skills of the body, in the so-called “unconscious” form. The active ring
stores information in the form of differentiated images, or in the form of
abstract knowledge that is easily reconstructed in memory and, should the
need arise, easily moved to the second signal system.
Aushra Augusta, Socion, or The Foundations of Socionics
Note: first and second signal systems are terms introduced in 1932 by a Russian
neurologist, psychologist and physiologist Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936). First signal
system covers the information we receive directly through our sense organs – visual
imagery, sounds, tastes, smells, etc. Second signal system works on the basis of the
first, but covers semantic information that is reconstructed by the human mind
through its ability to understand speech and writing. Second signal system is related
to higher nervous activity and is unique to humankind, unlike the first, which animals
also possess. When Augusta said that some information is “at the level of the
second signal system”, she generally meant that the individual is consciously aware
of this information, which enables them to share it verbally.
The mental ring receives, processes and uses information about the
:
The mental ring receives, processes and uses information about the
external world. It is comprehension of the external reality and conscious
adaptation to it. Energy is used to look for new ways of adaptation and
disseminate them among “members of the tribe”, to change their minds,
which is mostly done through the second signal system.
The vital ring receives, processes and uses information that comes from
within one’s organism, the organism in which the entire world is reflected.
It is physical merging with the world. Energy is used for instinctive physical
adaptation to external reality.
The vital ring is the echo of the external world in one’s own body. This
echo is also externalized, but most often only other people consciously
comprehend it as it becomes a part of external reality. The individual
themself is usually unable to use it without necessary training. Various
eastern teachings teach how to do it. The easiest start is our autotraining.
The mental ring deals with its situations in mental ways: collection and
transfer of information, dispute, evidence. Everything mostly happens at
the level of the second signal system.
The vital ring deals with situations in vital ways: reception of stimuli signals
and the organism’s reaction to them through the first signal system.
Aushra Augusta, The Characteristic of SLI
Each ring consists of two horizontal blocks, and each block contains two functions.
Extraverted elements are blocked with introverted elements, rational elements are
blocked with irrational elements, and both elements in the same block must be
either static or dynamic. I already described these rules in relation to the leading
and the creative, which was one instance of the general principle.
The first function of the block (with their order being defined by the direction of
the information flow) is called accepting, while the second is called producing [2].
Rather than being an element dichotomy like extraverted-introverted, accepting-
producing is a function dichotomy: for example, the leading function is always
accepting, even though the element it contains can be extraverted or introverted,
rational or irrational, static or dynamic.
Note: this quote may remind you of Augusta’s description of productive and
reproductive thinking from the third section. That description was specifically talking
about the functions of the Ego block, but this, once again, was an instance of the
general principle that applies to all blocks.
The following table shows the names of all blocks and functions, as well as which
:
functions are accepting and which are producing.
Vulnerable (point of
Producing Creative Mobilizing Demonstrative
least resistance, PoLR)
Note: I believe the name “ignoring” to be misleading, since nothing Augusta ever
wrote suggested that the corresponding element is “ignored”. I have also never seen
this version of the function’s name anywhere outside of the English-speaking circles;
in Russian socionic literature the function is usually called “наблюдательная”
(observing) or “ограничительная” (limiting or restricting). However, in this
introduction I am still calling it “ignoring”, because this is how it is most often called
in English.
The Ego and the Superego are contained in the mental ring, while the Id and the
Superid are in the vital ring. The diagram below is an updated version of the first
diagram from this section, showing everything we have learned so far. (Accepting
functions are marked by additional arrows pointing at them from the outside.)
:
Next I will talk about the rules of model A, specifically which functions share
which element dichotomies. Knowing these rules will let you reconstruct the
model for each type based on their Ego alone. Every rule will be supplemented by
a diagram.
For a rational type all accepting elements (leading, role, suggestive, ignoring) are
rational, which means that all producing elements (creative, vulnerable,
mobilizing, demonstrative) are irrational. The opposite is true for an irrational
type.
:
For an extraverted type mental accepting (leading, role) and vital producing
(mobilizing, demonstrative) elements are extraverted; mental producing
(creative, vulnerable) and vital accepting (suggestive, ignoring) elements are
introverted. The opposite is true for an introverted type.
:
For a static type the entire mental ring (leading, creative, role, vulnerable) is
static and the vital ring (suggestive, mobilizing, ignoring, demonstrative) is
dynamic. The opposite is true for a dynamic type.
:
Finally, certain pairs of functions always have the same domain. These pairs are
leading–ignoring, creative–demonstrative, role–suggestive, and vulnerable–
mobilizing.
:
Now let us try to use this knowledge to build the model A for a Si leading type. I
will go over the process function by function.
1. Leading: Si .
2. Creative: since Si is dynamic, introverted and irrational, the creative must be
dynamic, extraverted and rational. Both Fe and Te fit the bill (in the previous
section we already learned that the same leading function is always shared by
two types). For this example let us choose Fe , which means that the type
we are making this model for is sensoric-ethical introvert, or SEI ( ).
3. Role: like the leading, it must be dynamic, introverted and irrational. Since Si is
:
taken, only Ni fits.
4. Vulnerable: like the creative, it must be dynamic, extraverted and rational.
Since Fe is taken, only Te fits. (Note that if we chose Te creative, the
vulnerable would be Fe.)
5. Suggestive: we are now in the vital ring, and since the SEI’s mental ring is
dynamic, their vital ring is static. The suggestive must also be extraverted like
the creative, and irrational like the leading. This description matches both Se
and Ne, and we would not be able to tell which element should be chosen if
not for the last rule of shared domain. But since we know the suggestive has
the same domain as the role, we can easily conclude that it is Ne .
(Technically, the shared domain rule is the only one we really needed here, but
I wanted to be thorough.)
6. Mobilizing: shares domain with the vulnerable, so it is Ti . It is also static
(since the vital ring is static), introverted (since the leading is) and rational
(since the creative is).
7. Ignoring: static, extraverted, irrational. Ne is already taken, so the ignoring
must be Se (which is also the same domain as the leading).
8. Demonstrative: only one element, Fi , is left. It is static, introverted like the
leading, and rational like the creative.
The model we ended up with is the only possible configuration of elements for a
type with leading Si and creative Fe (SEI). Below is a diagram illustrating this
model – the structure is the same as in general model A diagrams, but each
function slot is replaced with the element occupying this slot for the SEI (“leading”
is replaced with Si, “creative” with Fe, and so on).
:
The process I outlined above can be followed to build model A for any type. You
can do it yourself for practice and verify the result against the below table.
ILE SEI LII ESE IEI SLE EIE LSI ILI SEE LIE ESI IEE SLI
Leading Ne Si Ti Fe Ni Se Fe Ti Ni Se Te Fi Ne Si
Creative Ti Fe Ne Si Fe Ti Ni Se Te Fi Ni Se Fi Te
Role Se Ni Fi Te Si Ne Te Fi Si Ne Fe Ti Se Ni
Vulnerable Fi Te Se Ni Te Fi Si Ne Fe Ti Si Ne Ti Fe
Suggestive Si Ne Fe Ti Se Ni Ti Fe Se Ni Fi Te Si Ne
Mobilizing Fe Ti Si Ne Ti Fe Se Ni Fi Te Se Ni Te Fi
Ignoring Ni Se Te Fi Ne Si Fi Te Ne Si Ti Fe Ni Se
Demonstrative Te Fi Ni Se Fi Te Ne Si Ti Fe Ne Si Fe Ti
The blocks of the active [mental] socionic ring bring us information about
the possibilities of intervening with the outside world, of influencing it. The
blocks of the passive [vital] ring bring information about the situation and
functioning of the subject of reflection, themself.
Aushra Augusta, The Characteristic of ILE
This is not the only way to categorize the blocks, however – Augusta also divided
them into potential or middle (Superego and Superid) and kinetic, expansive or
business (Ego and Id) [7, 11]. In section 3 we already looked at the mental,
expansive Ego block in depth, and here we will examine the other three blocks,
starting from the expansive Id and moving to the middle Superego and Superid.
We will also look at the individual functions each block consists of, although,
unfortunately, the amount of information there is on each specific function varies,
leading to some of them being underdescribed.
Note: the functions from middle blocks are often called weak, while those from
expansive blocks are called strong.
These two blocks are the two types of expansion into the external world.
:
These two blocks are the two types of expansion into the external world.
The Ego is expansion during which society gets subjugated to the
individual’s intellect, while the Id is expansion during which the individual
gets subjugated to society’s intellect. […]
The Ego is the individual’s contribution towards adapting society to
objective reality. It is the creation of new standards of adaptation to the
surrounding objects and phenomena, with this adaptation getting
increasingly more rational.
The Id is the individual’s own adaptation to social reality. […]
On the Ego the individual intrudes on society and claims their rights; on
the Id society intrudes on the individual’s affairs and activity, dictating its
own rules of behavior.
On the Ego the individual proclaims their rights to society; on the Id the
individual acknowledges society’s rights to themself, feeling bad if said
society does not use its rights often.
On the Ego the individual evaluates society and what happens in it, makes
categorical corrections, instills new norms of relations; on the Id it is
established how much society needs the individual and their services,
what their “use value” is, whether the individual and their activity get
included into social energy metabolism, and to what extent.
On the Ego the individual creates new values; the Id dutifully and vigilantly
serves the already accepted social values.
On the Ego the individual brags; on the Id they wait for praise instead.
Aushra Augusta, The Characteristic of ILE
Note: see section 3 for the description of the Ego and its functions.
Id (vital)
Ignoring (accepting)
Which mechanisms allow other people to program the ILE’s time? This
happens due to the fact that there is a kind of alarm clock inside the ILE,
one that only other people can “set” and that the ILE obeys completely.
This is why the ILE follows orders related to where they need to be and
what they need to do, if they are also told when they need to do it. The
ILE simply cannot permit themselves to be late for anything, they are
unable to even if they want to. They cannot oversleep or arrive late for
anything, even if people were not too serious about the time they had
given. The ILE is often able to navigate time entirely without a clock, as if
hypnotized. However, all this only applies if they were “programmed” by
someone else, and the ILE will not arrive before the appointed time,
either. After all, a program is something that is meant to be executed
precisely, on the dot. If the ILE did not obey a specific time-related
command, this means that the person who gave the command does not
exist for them, that the ILE does not recognize them as an equal. They
only obey their equals.
Aushra Augusta, The Characteristic of ILE
Demonstrative (producing)
These blocks are the two channels of information about two objects that,
from the perspective of the IM process, are equal: the external world, and
the individual themself. The Superego is the individual’s conception of
themself through the prism of what they know about the world. […] The
Superid is the individual’s conception of society based on what they know
about themself from this society. […]
The amount of information available to the Superego is conditioned by
the individual’s social opportunities, and especially by how mobile they
are.
On the Superego the individual adapts to the external world. They create a
conception of their self in accordance with the social reflection of this self,
and they act in accordance with this social reflection.
On the Superid the individual adapts the world to their own image. It
could be said that they create the world in accordance with their personal
parameters, the latter being something other people have notified and
continuously notify them about as they inform the individual about this
aspect of reality.
Aushra Augusta, The Characteristic of ILE
Superego (mental)
Role (accepting)
This is the so-called place of least resistance (PoLR) of the human psyche,
the main source of all conflicts, hurt feelings and misunderstandings. If the
individual is close to, and cooperates with, someone whose psyche is
complementary, the control over the individual’s vulnerable function is
automatically passed on to that person. In this case the individual feels
protected. When they act, they can rely on the other person and partially
divert their attention. Yet even in such conditions this function remains the
place of the biggest doubts and worries, even though it no longer leads to
the individual feeling maladjusted to society. On the contrary, it becomes
the basis of their creative search. But if the individual does not feel such
security, any criticism from the outside, any hint or double entrende (even
those that are merely inferred) bewilder them, knock them off-balance,
traumatize them, lead to character accentuations and mental illnesses.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Intertype Relations
To summarize the above – in order to avoid comments about their PoLR, each
individual tries to collect as much information as they are able on their role, which
they then use to form a conclusion on the PoLR. The Superego, therefore, is a
block that receives quite a lot of conscious attention from us.
This does not mean that a person with the leading [Te-Si, LSE] block
:
This does not mean that a person with the leading [Te-Si, LSE] block
directs their main attention to the objective processes around them. On
the contrary – their main attention is given to the emotional state of the
surrounding people, and to efforts to avoid conflicts in the emotional
sphere. However, the strength of their intellect is in their ability to control
objective processes, not understand emotions, which they are just
particularly sensitive to. At the same time, a person with the leading
[Fe-Si, ESE] block, someone who skilfully controls other people’s
emotions, directs their main attention to the logic of objective processes.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Intertype Relations
On the PoLR “the same premises can lead to one and only one conclusion, one
that is also the same in each case” [5]. In other words, the Superego is a
normative block that desires objective certainty due to the individual’s inability to
apply its information situationally, adapting it to the specific circumstances at
hand. This differs it from the Ego, where “under different conditions different
conclusions get drawn from the same facts“.
The problems the Ego consistently deals with are borne on the Superego.
:
The problems the Ego consistently deals with are borne on the Superego.
The IEI’s Ego [Ni-Fe] is always directed toward some kind of future
improvement.
What kind of social creativity does the IEI arrive at, and which path leads
them to it?
The IEI cannot live with two ways to act in the same situation [vulnerable
Te]. Therefore, they become socially creative when the expectations of the
surrounding people start conflicting. In other words, what makes IEIs
transformers and philosophers is the very fact that they need norms, that
they need to know the only right way to act in certain situations (the
answer which does not exist). The best example of this is J.-J. Rousseau.
During his life Rousseau had to mix in with different strata of society that
made contradictory demands, and he could not decide which actions are
actually correct. Each social stratum Rousseau was a member of placed its
own demands on the people’s behavior and actions, including the actions
of Rousseau himself. An action is an expression of one’s relation to reality,
so how should one act if every group of people one interacts with has
different expectations? Hence the slogan “Back to nature“, back to natural
human behavior. The IEI, like any other type, becomes a warrior in the
social sense by seeking conformist modes of behavior or conformist
relationships.
Aushra Augusta, The Characteristic of IEI
Note: “…Rousseau holds that “uncorrupted morals” prevail in the “state of nature”. […]
Rousseau asserted that the stage of human development associated with what he called
“savages” was the best or optimal in human development, between the less-than-
optimal extreme of brute animals on the one hand and the extreme of decadent
civilization on the other. “…[N]othing is so gentle as man in his primitive state, when
placed by nature at an equal distance from the stupidity of brutes and the fatal
enlightenment of civil man”.” (quoted from Wikipedia)
Superid (vital)
Suggestive (accepting)
Although it is not made explicit, this paragraph, taken from Augusta’s description
of duality, is most likely related to the realization of the suggestive:
Here, the “grumbling” refers to the individual’s complaints about “things being
wrong somehow”, even though the real root of this frustration is in the fact that
they are not receiving information or help on their suggestive, despite
unconsciously expecting it. In Theory of Intertype Relations Augusta called this
expectation “a search for someone with a complementary psychological type,
someone who sees the side of the individual’s life struggles that the individual
themself neither understands nor sees” [3]. One example of this from the same
work goes as follows:
Mobilizing (producing)
:
Mobilization under the supervision of others and with their help.
Aushra Augusta, The Characteristic of SLI
Augusta seemed to consider the mobilizing a necessary step for the active
realization of the demonstrative, a step that cannot be interrupted in any way
because it is particularly vulnerable to such interruptions. Any negative or
superfluous external feedback on this function demobilizes the individual and
prevents them for realizing their energy on the demonstrative. In addition, the
mobilizing only receives energy for its own realization after the demonstrative has
enough, since the demonstrative takes priority as a producing function of an
expansive block.
The ILE always feels great and completely safe in a stream of other
:
The ILE always feels great and completely safe in a stream of other
people’s positive emotions [mobilizing Fe], especially if those people care
about the way the ILE feels physically. At the same time, the ILE gets lost
whenever there is any emotional unfriendliness, which is a blow to their
weakest link of IM. They are not afraid of what are called real dangers,
those simply excite their activity. What is dangerous to the ILE is the
unfriendliness of others around them, not having people around who
would have a positive attitude towards them. Why? Probably because an
emotional blow to the Superid tells the ILE that society does not approve
of the realization of their Id. This kind of blow is a way to draw energy
away from this realization. The ILE’s Id acts only insofar their Superid is
provided with emotional excitation to turn “potential” energy into actual
energy. An emotional blow removes this inner excitation, sort of denies it,
crosses it out as wrong, erroneous. This is why the ILE loses heart. […]
Emotions are not visible in dangerous situations when they (or extraverted
ethics) are the second element of the Superid, as is the case for the ILE.
This is because all inner excitation is used on the Id’s external activity
instead. When it comes to manifestations of activity, the Id, being an
expansive block, takes priority over the middle Superid block. The ILE’s
inner excitation is only realized in emotions on the Superid when it is not
realized in activity on the Id. Hence in dangerous situations this type is not
emotional, instead being tense and very resourceful. The higher the
tension, the more resourceful the ILE is. All excitation is meant to be used
on the Id first and foremost. Only the “surplus” is realized on the Superid:
the ILE only emotes in excitatory, but safe situations, or after the danger
passes. In other words, when there is a surplus of energy that cannot be
used in activity, an “auxiliary valve” opens and the ILE “emotes”.
Aushra Augusta, The Characteristic of ILE
For the types (ILE) and (SLE) the second point is something that
:
For the types (ILE) and (SLE) the second point is something that
distracts them from their focus on their mobilized emotions [mobilizing
Fe]. Their ability to work disappears when anything, any little thing,
distracts them from these emotions.
During an exam or lecture you can interrupt these types with exclamations
or questions as often as you like, but only as long as these interruptions
pertain to the business at hand rather than being purely emotional. Any
emotionality that leads them aside knocks these types off track. In general
they must not be distracted from emotionally inspiring ideas by anything
that is not related to the given situation. […]
For the types (LSE) and (ESE) the second point is extraverted
intuition [mobilizing Ne]. It is bad when other people’s critical and
inappropriate remarks split this type’s abilities, awareness or knowledge.
For example, if someone subjects their abilities to a critical analysis and
contrasts them with others’ abilities during work.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Reinin Dichotomies
Note: the original paragraph mentions LSE and LIE, rather than LSE and ESE. This must
be an error because the text talks about the mobilizing function and the LIE type does not
have mobilizing Ne, while the ESE does. For this translation I took the liberty of changing
LIE to ESE.
Note: when you read these compilations or Augusta’s type descriptions, you will come
across the term “half-phases”. This term is originally from Augusta’s paper Socion, or The
Foundations of Socionics and refers to the four steps, or phases, of the energy and
information metabolism cycle. Each phase includes two half-phases, one extraverted and
one introverted, of which one is always in the mental ring and the other in the vital ring.
The order of the phases corresponds to the information flow in the two rings and goes as
follows: role (1/1) – suggestive (1/2), vulnerable (2/1) – mobilizing (2/2), leading (3/1) –
ignoring (3/2), creative (4/1) – demonstrative (4/2). Generally, when Augusta mentions
half-phases while describing types, she means the same thing we now call functions. You
can consult the table on this page when you need to remember which function
corresponds to a specific half-phase.
The blocks of duals are meant to interact with one another. Consider the following
diagram that shows models A for the ILE-SEI dyad (if you do not remember which
symbol stands for which IME, you can consult section 2 or this page).
:
Look at this diagram closely, and you will see that these types have the exact
same blocks: for example, Ne-Ti is the ILE’s Ego and the SEI’s Superid. In dual
pairs one dual’s Ego always matches the other’s Superid, and one’s Superego
always matches the other’s Id. Notice that mental blocks match vital blocks: this is
one of the crucial things that make dualization possible.
The mental ring only becomes physically active after being activated by
:
The mental ring only becomes physically active after being activated by
the vital ring of the dual, or at least those of other people. The Ego block
only engages in activity after acquiring followers who want to use its ideas,
but are unable to implement them on their own. The Superego, too, only
moves from talk to action after the people it provided with information
start to act on their own, and it becomes necessary to straighten their line
of action.
There is a certain “irradiation” of physical activity, which is transferred from
one type’s vital ring to another person’s mental blocks (that are formed
from the same half-phases of EM). With its own physical activity the Id
forces the dual’s Superego to act, “provokes” it. Thus the Superego
becomes the Id’s “acolyte”, with the Id feeding on the information it
receives from the Superego. Similarly, with its helplessness the Superid
provokes the dual’s Ego to real activity.
Aushra Augusta, The Characteristic of SLI
Some additional information about the cooperation of the duals’ blocks can be
found here.
There is another way to categorize the blocks and functions they contain, but this
categorization is not just important for duality: it is also the basis for the
separation of types into quadras.
A quadra is … formed from four types of IM, or two dual dyads that
activate each other … . Members of the same quadra are united by a
certain commonality of interests, and most importantly, by the absence of
opportunities for conflict. They always understand each other and do not
see anything offensive or hurtful behind each other’s words and actions.
Their teamwork is extremely fruitful and productive.
Communication within one’s own quadra relieves physical and
psychological fatigue, activates the individual, improves their vitality, and
provides psychological immunity to life adversities. A quadra is the ideal
psychotherapy group. Quadras can be formed from a rather high number
of people, and it is not at all necessary for there to be an equal number of
each of the types of IM.
It is noteworthy that if a person from another quadra enters such a group,
they either feel extremely uncomfortable, or cause this kind of discomfort
to the entire quadra. “Who wins” is determined by the ratio of the types of
IM. Some “outsiders” are barely noticed by the quadra, while others “split”
it, “tear it apart.”
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Intertype Relations
There are four quadras in total, and each quadra is named after a letter of the
Greek alphabet: alpha (α), beta (β), gamma (γ) and delta (δ). Below I list the
types each quadra contains.
The main feature of the verbal blocks is the fact that everything related to
:
The main feature of the verbal blocks is the fact that everything related to
the aspects reflected by these blocks gets discussed a lot without any
embarrassment. Any arguments, discussions, attacks are possible. All of
this is at the level of an intellectual discussion game, or help for those who
do not understand something. On the other hand, the actual realization of
these blocks happens individually, i.e. preferably without witnesses,
especially those witnesses who are inclined to be critical.
Non-verbal blocks are the blocks of collective activity, and this is the area
where people are careful with conversations and jokes. The only thing
allowed here is the transfer of objective information, what one has seen or
heard without one’s own comments.
Quadrals are able to cooperate due to the fact that their verbal (as well as
non-verbal) blocks are formed from the same half-phases of IM.
Therefore, under no circumstances do they seem tactless, unfriendly, or
hostile to each other. If they are not doing or saying something, it is clear
that they cannot do it or do not know it.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Reinin Dichotomies
Note: in most modern socionic circles the verbal elements are instead called valued,
and the non-verbal ones are called unvalued or subdued. However, these terms
have connotations attached to them that Augusta’s original works did not have, as
the Superego and the Id were never described as blocks whose information the
person values less, considers less important, or is repelled by.
For an example let us look at the verbal blocks of each type in quadra alpha.
You can see that only four elements are presents in the verbal blocks of each type:
Ne, Si, Ti and Fe. These are the verbal elements of quadra alpha.
The verbal elements of each quadra necessarily contain one element from all four
domains: intuition, sensation, logic and ethics. Below I provide a list of verbal
:
elements for all quadras.
You may notice that certain pairs of elements always come together: Ne-Si, Ni-Se,
Ti-Fe and Te-Fi. The reason for this is that, if you have one element from the pair
in your Ego, the other is necessarily present in your Superid (both verbal blocks).
For example, if someone’s Si is leading, their Ne is necessarily suggestive (and
leading for their dual), and if their Si is creative, their Ne is mobilizing (and creative
for their dual). These element pairs are known as axes. Being “on an axis” means
that the person in question belongs to a quadra with the corresponding verbal
elements (alpha and delta are on the Ne-Si axis, but alpha is also on the Ti-Fe axis
while delta is not).
More information about quadras can be found on this page. I will finish this
section with a table that shows all three major block and function dichotomies we
discussed.
Kinetic (expansive,
Ego Mental Verbal
business)
Kinetic (expansive,
Id Vital Non-verbal
business)
6. Intertype Relations
The role each element plays in our psyche determines both the way we perceive
the corresponding information, and the way we ourselves express it. Our
interactions with each person are largely conditioned by the similarities and
:
differences in our two ways of perception and expression, and since all sixteen
types are unique, the specifics of our communication with each will also be unique.
In socionics this is described by the theory of intertype relations, or ITRs [3]
(duality being one such ITR).
For duals the same functions always contain the same elements: one partner’s
leading is always the other’s suggestive, one’s demonstrative is always the other’s
vulnerable, and so on. Other intertype relations are also defined by the way the
two models A map onto each other, and the general characteristics of the relation
remain the same regardless of the exact types of both participants. For example,
the duality between the ILE and the SEI has the same positive effect on the duals’
psyche as one between the EIE and the LSI (though, of course, there are also a lot
of specifics that are unique to each dyad).
In symmetric ITRs the differences between the two models are also symmetric.
The ILE’s leading Ne is suggestive for their dual SEI, and the SEI’s leading Si is
suggestive for the ILE; the ILE’s creative Ti is mobilizing for the SEI, and the SEI’s
creative Fe is mobilizing for the ILE; and so on. The same principle applies to all
symmetric relations, of which there are twelve: identity, duality, mirror,
activation, mirage, business, superego, extinguishment, conflict, quasi-identity,
:
kindred and semi-duality; the diagrams on this page illustrate all of them. The
page also contains Augusta’s descriptions of the ITRs, though the compilation is
not complete yet.
If twelve ITRs are symmetric, does that mean that four are asymmetric? Yes, but
not quite. There are only two distinct asymmetric relations, called by Augusta the
relations of social request and social control; however, since these relations are
asymmetric, they result not in two, but in four separate positions the individual
may find themself in during communication. In the relation of social request one
partner (requester or inductor) unconsciously issues said request to the other
partner (receiver or recipient), who then tries to fulfill it; Augusta believed this
process to be the “driving force of progress” [3]. Likewise, the relation of social
control (usually translated to English as supervision) has the supervisor and the
supervisee, with the latter being under the former’s control. Each type participates
in each relation on both sides: for example, the ILE supervises the LSI, but are
themself supervised by the EII.
The relations in which experience and social request get transferred are at
the base of the psychic mechanism of social progress. These relations
perform two functions: 1) transfer the experience accumulated and
consciously comprehended by some types of IM to other types of IM; 2)
create social request, i.e. identify the unfulfilled needs of some types of IM
in order to turn these needs into other types’ social interests, correcting
and directing the activity of the latter types in a particular way.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Intertype Relations
First, one type of IM begins having some needs that they are not entirely
conscious of, but that are clearly unfulfilled and lead to irritation or
confusion. […] This is the emergence of a social problem that turns into a
social request for the [recipient]. The mechanism of transfer of experience
and social request activates when the inductor’s discomfort reaches the
recipient’s consciousness. The fulfilled social request enriches society with
something new, but this novelty is understood by the next recipient rather
than society at large: society rejects this novelty or does not consider it
actively enough, but the individual will take it as a request.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Intertype Relations
:
Social request is an assignment that is truly social rather than individual.
We cannot say that the inductor consciously issues the request – rather,
what the recipient perceives as a request is the discomfort their inductor
encounters during the fulfillment of their own life program. […] The social
nature of the request also manifests in the fact that the requester does
not directly benefit from its fulfillment.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Intertype Relations
The recipient sees their inductor’s ideas in a more differentiated than they
themself do. You could say the recipient continues the inductor’s ideas in
their mind when they see them.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Intertype Relations
As the above quotes mention, along with social request the inductor passes on
their own experience to the recipient. This latter part is emphasized in the
traditional English name for this relation: the relation of benefit. Accordingly, the
inductor is called benefactor, and the recipient – beneficiary.
The diagrams illustrating benefit and supervision can be found here. Because of
the importance Augusta attached to the asymmetric relations, particularly benefit,
:
I strongly encourage you to read her writings about both benefit and supervision
(please note that at the moment only a compilation of fragments from the benefit
description is translated, as the original description is very long).
Below I show which types are in a relation of benefit with which, with the arrows
pointing from the benefactor to the beneficiary:
As you can see, when you choose a starting type and move from benefactor to
beneficiary, you eventually arrive back at the same type. The self-contained
groups of the four types that are in a relation of benefit with each other are known
as benefit rings, or rings of social progress.
Supervision follows the same pattern, forming supervision rings, or rings of social
control (arrows point from supervisor to supervisee):
Each dual dyad supervises and benefits another dual dyad. For example, the ILE-
SEI dyad supervises and benefits the LSI-EIE dyad: the ILE supervises the LSI and
benefits the EIE, and the SEI supervises the EIE and benefits the LSI. The following
diagram illustrates this.
:
There is something interesting going on with supervision. Let us look at models A
of the four types forming one supervision ring.
The mental and vital rings of these four types share the direction of the
information flow, but they get “rotated” for each consecutive type. For example,
this is how the ILE’s model A turns into that of their supervisee the LSI:
:
The ILE’s leading and creative “move” one step counterclockwise to become,
respectively, the LSI’s vulnerable and leading. Because of this, supervision rings
always “match” the mental rings of the corresponding types. For example, ILE
(leading Ne) -> LSI (l. Ti) -> SEE (l. Se) -> EII (l. Fi) -> ILE (l. Ne) matches the Ne ->
Ti -> Se -> Fi -> Ne ring, which is mental for all four types. (Of course, all elements
shift and not just the Ego: mental elements “move” counterclockwise, while vital
ones “move” clockwise.)
Below I attach the table of intertype relations (the letter designations come after
the table itself). There is also a convenient tool you can use to quickly check the
ITRs for each type (just click on the desired type). The tool uses alternative names
for a few of the ITRs: contrary for extinguishment, illusionary for mirage, and
:
cooperation for business. To change the language, press the gear icon in the
upper right corner.
ILE SEI LII ESE IEI SLE EIE LSI ILI SEE LIE ESI IEE SLI
ILE i d m a mg bs B S e se q c k sd
SEI d i a m bs mg S B se e c q sd k
LII m a i d b s sd k q c e se S B
ESE a m d i s b k sd c q se e B S
IEI mg bs B S i d m a k sd s b e se
SLE bs mg S B d i a m sd k b s se e
EIE b s sd k m a i d S B bs mg q c
LSI s b k sd a m d i B S mg bs c q
ILI e se q c k sd s b i d m a mg bs
SEE se e c q sd k b s d i a m bs mg
LIE q c e se S B bs mg m a i d b s
ESI c q se e B S mg bs a m d i s b
IEE k sd s b e se q c mg bs B S i d
SLI sd k b s se e c q bs mg S B d i
EII S B bs mg q c e se b s sd k m a
LSE B S mg bs c q se e s b k sd a m
Intertype relations
i – identity
d – duality
:
m – mirror
a – activation
mg – mirage
bs – business
B – benefactor
S – supervisor
e – extinguishment
se – superego
q – quasi-identity
c – conflict
k – kindred
sd – semi-duality
s – supervisee
b – beneficiary
7. Miscellaneous
Reinin dichotomies
In 1984 Russian socionist Grigory Reinin mathematically proved that there are
fifteen different ways to divide the sixteen types into two equal sized groups
based on a certain principle [4]. These fifteen ways are called Reinin dichotomies
or Reinin traits, and include the four dichotomies that come from Jung’s original
work: extraverted-introverted, intuitive-sensoric, logical-ethical, and rational-
irrational. However, usually people use the term “Reinin dichotomies” to refer to
the remaining eleven dichotomies in order to distinguish them from the Jungian
ones.
Each of the eleven Reinin dichotomies can be derived from the four “base” ones.
For example, the static-dynamic dichotomy we discussed earlier is at the
intersection of extraversion-introversion and rationality-irrationality: irrational
extraverts and rational introverts are static, while rational extraverts and irrational
introverts are dynamic. Another example is tactical-strategic, which is at the
intersection of rationality-irrationality and intuition-sensation: rational sensoric
types and irrational intuitive types are tactical, while irrational sensoric types and
rational intuitive types are strategic.
Process direction: Ne -> Ti -> Se -> Fi -> Ne, Si -> Fe -> Ni -> Te -> Si
Result direction: Ne -> Fi -> Se -> Ti -> Ne, Si -> Te -> Ni -> Fe -> Si
Duals share process-result because one dual’s mental ring is the exact same as
the other dual’s vital ring, which means that the direction of the flow is also the
same. For example, both the ILE and the SEI have a Ne -> Ti -> Se -> Fi ring,
except it is mental for the ILE (leading -> creative -> role -> vulnerable) and vital
for the SEI (suggestive -> mobilizing -> ignoring -> demonstrative); see last
diagram in section 5. Types in the same supervision ring share process-result as
well because they, too, have the same direction of the information flow (as
discussed in section 6).
The reason Augusta considered the blockings important was that, due to shared
direction of the information flow and accepting-producing elements, the types in
the same blocking end up perceiving the world in a similar way [2]. For instance,
for aristocratic rationals (LSI, EIE, LSE, EII) accepting Te is always blocked with
producing Si, and accepting Fe is blocked with producing Ni, which leads to the
following perception:
Contrast that to democratic rationals (LII, ESE, LIE, ESI), who have Te-Ni and Fe-Si
instead:
:
For [democratic rationals], people’s work activity and deeds [accepting Te]
lead not to aesthetic feelings, but rather to a sense of safety in the future
[producing Ni]. Emotions, excitation [accepting Fe], lead to aesthetic
feelings and aesthetic delight [producing Si].
Aushra Augusta, Socion, or The Foundations of Socionics
Note: the word octave here refers to two opposite quadras, or quadras that do not share
any verbal and non-verbal elements. Alpha and gamma form the democratic octave,
while beta and delta form the aristocratic octave.
There is no doubt that the highest number of pure theorists can be found
in the democratic octave, among the intuitive logical types. Yet those
quadras are also the ones that have the most practical and, as I would say,
the most social or socialized sensoric ethical types.
The aristocratic octave has theorists of a different kind, they [intuitive
ethical types] are more so theorists of inner, spiritual and cultural
processes. It is no wonder that Belinsky (EIE) was the one to become
the greatest critic of literature. And Huxley (IEE) turned the discovery
of the unsociable Darwin (ILE) into a part of humanity’s shared
culture. Sensoric logical types are the calmest, most honest, stubborn and
consistent administrative workers and organizers of production. Thus,
each octave consists of two discussion clubs in addition to two blockings.
The democratic octave has:
a club of impractical theorists – [ILE], [LII], [LIE], [ILI]
a club of practical doers, or businesslike people – [ESE], [SEI],
[SEE], [ESI]
The aristocratic octave has:
:
a club of humanitarian artists, disseminators of culture – [EIE],
[IEI], [IEE], [EII]
a club of technocrats and state officials – [LSE], [SLI], [SLE],
[LSI]
Here is what we know about clubs. Quadras invigorate people, but no one
wants to become completely closed off in their quadra. That is also boring,
there is not enough variety and, perhaps, not enough disagreements that
could serve as an impetus to development. This role is fulfilled by
discussion clubs, which unite people based on their shared interest in
specific sides of social life. Clubs facilitate business growth, they help
people hone and perfect their intellectual “weapons”. All logical types are
quite strongly drawn to other logical types, sensoric types are drawn to
other sensoric types, etc. […]
People always tend to gather around some kind of table. A quadra is fun
without alcohol, it is only a hindrance there. This is also the case for a club,
as long as there is an exchange of information, arguments, discussions. But
without alcohol it is hard to become so united with your club that you
accomplish something concrete together. It is not a quadra. […]
Discussion clubs are formed from members of quadras with completely
opposite verbality. One might wonder how such people manage to not
offend or hurt each other with their words or actions. This is because the
same [elements] for them are all located either in program blocks [Ego,
Id], or base blocks [Superego, Superid]. The Ego and the Id can only joke
about the other person’s “narrow-mindedness”, and this “narrow-
mindedness” always manifests itself during teamwork, in situations that
require concrete activity. But otherwise, outside of work, even one’s
extinguishment type feels like a kindred spirit.
Aushra Augusta, Theory of Reinin Dichotomies
So far I have not seen Augusta talk about other small groups, nor did she write
descriptions of individual quadras.
On the other hand, in her commentary on Jung’s typology Augusta writes that
changing a person’s type is impossible, and such an attempt will lead to illness.
She then quotes the following passage from Jung’s book Psychological Types:
Note: the position Augusta took in this article (and in general) is that Jung’s typology
and socionics describe the same thing, with socionics merely being more developed.
For this reason everything she says about Jung’s types is to be understood as
applying to socionic types as well.
Our observations show that this process always takes place when people
do not have partners with complementary psyche, as a result of which
everyone tries to make everyone else into their dual. The one who cannot
withstand this fight is forced to give up the realization of some part of
their personality and becomes neurotic.
Aushra Augusta, Commentary on Jung’s Typology and Introduction to Information
Metabolism
Here, both Jung and Augusta seem to be talking about an attempt to change
someone else’s type. So perhaps Augusta believed you can change your own type,
but not that of another person. Alternatively, she might have considered it
impossible to change types in general at first, but changed her mind later on.
Augusta’s descriptions are quite long, but much of the information they contain is
useful even outside of the type in question. For instance, the nature of blocks and
functions is often discussed, with the examples of the specific type serving as an
illustration of the general rule or tendency. The descriptions show how Augusta
actually applied her theory; “mechanism of IM” is a term she often used, and that
seems to be how she viewed model A – not as a static collection of traits, but as
an intricate mechanism that is always in motion. Out of everything I read from
Augusta the type descriptions were arguably the most useful in teaching me how
to think about socionics, which is why I would encourage everyone to go over
them (out of the two fully translated ones IEE offers more insight than IEI).
Because of conflicting typings in the first two cases and inconclusive evidence in
the third, I would treat these three individuals as untyped to make sure an error is
avoided. Some other works I already shared or mentioned (type descriptions,
Measure of Writer’s Talent, Natural Quadrization) have additional typings not
present in the list. Note that, much like with Alexei, some typings of the same
people differ between sources.
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