- Jung identifies himself as both ISTP (early life) and INTP (later life).
- Myers identifies Jung as I-TP.
- Keirsey & son identify Jung as INFJ.
- Von Franz identifies Jung as both an N-domiant type (i.e. EN-P or IN-J) as well as a “Thinking-Intuition type with inferior Feeling,” – “the same type as herself,” i.e. INTP.
- Van der Hoop identifies Jung as ISTP.
- Jung identifies himself as having Histrionic traits.
- Sabina Spielrein (patient, student, and lover of Jung) identifies Jung as having Dependent traits.
- Michael Fordham (Jung’s student) identifies Jung as having Narcissistic, Schizophrenic and Paranoid traits.
- Henry A. Murray (Harvard professor of Psychology) identifies Jung as having Schizophrenic traits.
- The Center for Applications of Psychological Type (CAPT) identifies Jung as both INTP and INTJ.
- Aniela Jaffe (Jung’s secretary and co-author of ‘Memories, Dreams, Reflections’) identifies Jung as an N-domiant type (i.e. EN-P or IN-J).
- Sonu Shamdasani (author of ‘Jung and the Making of Modern Psychology’) identifies Jung as I-TP.
- James Graham Johnston (author of ‘Jung’s Compass of Psychological Types‘) identifies Jung as an Introverted type with Ti and Ni.
- V.W. Odajnyk (author of ‘Archetype and Character‘) identifies Jung as both INTP (early life) and INTJ (later life) and as having Schizophrenic traits.
- Hans Schmid-Guisan (Jung’s friend and collaborator on ‘The Question of Psychological Types‘) identifies Jung as an I-T type.
- Angelo Spoto (author of ‘Jung’s Typology in Perspective’) identifies Jung as INTJ, as well as raising the possibility that Jung “broke the model” by having two dominant functions(!).
- Walter Kaufmann (author of ‘Discovering the Mind’) identifies Jung as an extrovert and as having Schizophrenic traits.
- C.A. Meier (president of the C. G. Jung Institute in Zürich) identifies Jung as an introvert.
- James Oppenheim (early follower of Jung) identified Jung as an introvert with well-developed extroversion.
- John Beebe (Jungian analyst and editor of ‘The Question of Psychological Types‘) identifies Jung as INTJ.
- John M. Thorburn (author of ‘Analytical Psychology and the Concept of Individuality’) identified Freud as a Sensation type, Jung as an Intuitive type.
- Sonu Shamdasani (professor of history and author of ‘Jung and the Making of Modern Psychology’) identifies Jung as an an as an N-domiant type with Ti (i.e. ENTP or INFJ.)
- Richard Noll (Ph.D. in clinical psychology) identifies Jung as having Paranoid traits.
- Ernest Jones (Freudian psychoanalyst) identifies Jung as having “colossally” Narcissistic traits.
- Peter Homans (professor of psychology and author of ‘Jung in Context’) identifies Jung as having Narcissistic traits.
- Ronald Hayman (author of ‘A Life of Jung’) identifies Jung as having Narcissistic, Schizophrenic, and Schizoid traits.
- Thomas M. King (author of ‘Jung’s Four and Some Philosophers’) identifies Jung as an N dominant type (e.g. ENP or INJ).
- CelebrityTypes Admin team identifies Jung as INFJ.
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While we would like to be able to take credit for being the first to type Jung as INFJ, we must defer to Keirsey & son who beat us to the assessment. To our knowledge, Keirsey & son do not provide any argument for their assessment, and nor do we (yet), so perhaps our reasoning is different (in fact, it most likely is different). But at any rate, the credit for being the first to advance the assessment of Jung as INFJ belongs not to us, but to Keirsey & co.