Function stack test
A useful function stack test should not only name a four-letter type. It should show why a dominant function looks likely, what supports it, and where inferior-function pressure appears.
TypeJung starts from the full function profile, then interprets likely dominant, auxiliary, tertiary, and inferior positions as a working hypothesis.
A stack is a model of how functions organize together. The dominant function is usually the most trusted mode. The auxiliary often supports it from the opposite axis. The inferior marks a less conscious edge that can become visible under stress.
Because stack interpretation depends on relationships between functions, a good test needs more than one score. It needs a map.
Function stack tests can feel confusing when two functions score close together or when stress makes the inferior signal loud. That does not always mean the test failed. It may mean the pattern needs careful reading.
TypeJung treats the stack as a hypothesis. The free result gives you the map, and the optional paid report explains how that pattern may show up in development, conflict, and daily practice.
| Result pattern | What it may mean | Next check |
|---|---|---|
| High dominant and auxiliary scores | A stable leading pattern may be visible | Read both function guides |
| Close scores across several functions | Context may be shaping the result | Compare real situations before forcing type |
| Inferior signal feels strong | Stress may be amplifying the edge | Read stress and grip material carefully |
| Type label feels close but incomplete | The stack may need interpretation beyond stereotypes | Use the sample report to inspect depth |
The point of a function stack test is not to memorize a label. The point is to recognize the pattern when it appears in decisions, relationships, stress, and recovery.
After the free map, use the dominant-inferior axis as a practical self-observation tool: what do you over-trust, what do you avoid, and what brings you back into balance?
Take the free TypeJung assessment first. If the core map feels useful, Insight is currently CA$7 with TYPEJUNG30 and Mastery is CA$20.30 with the same Stripe code.
TypeJung gives a likely stack pattern and function evidence. Treat it as a structured hypothesis rather than a final identity verdict.
Yes. The free result includes a likely dominant-inferior axis and a broader hierarchy of function signals.
No. A type label summarizes a pattern, while a stack describes the functions that may be organizing that pattern.