Random personality types with cognitive functions and behavioral descriptions
The 16 personality types are based on Carl Jung's theory of cognitive functions. The system uses four preference pairs: Introversion versus Extraversion (where you direct energy), Sensing versus Intuition (how you take in information), Thinking versus Feeling (how you make decisions), and Judging versus Perceiving (how you organize your outer life). Each combination produces a four-letter type, and each type has a dominant cognitive function that shapes how they process the world. A type leading with Introverted Intuition, for instance, navigates through pattern recognition and future-oriented thinking, while a type leading with Extraverted Sensing is grounded in concrete, present-moment experience. These cognitive priorities determine how someone notices details, handles conflict, expresses affection, and responds to stress. The 16 types are not rigid boxes but descriptions of preferred mental processes, and the dominant function in particular explains why two people can look at the same situation and focus on completely different aspects of it.