Jungian typology is a way to understand the patterns behind attention, judgment, stress, and development. It is deeper than a label because it asks which mental functions carry the most energy and which parts of the psyche remain less conscious.
TypeJung turns that model into a free assessment and a set of readable guides so you can compare your own pattern with the theory.
Carl Jung described type through two attitudes, introversion and extraversion, and four psychological functions: thinking, feeling, sensation, and intuition. Modern cognitive-function language combines those into eight function-attitudes.
That means a useful Jungian typology result should explain more than whether someone is introverted or intuitive. It should show how attention and judgment actually organize themselves.
Introverted and extraverted attitudes describe the direction of energy
Thinking and feeling describe judging or evaluation
Sensation and intuition describe perception or information gathering
The dominant-inferior axis often reveals the clearest growth tension
Why TypeJung starts with the function-stack map
A four-letter type can be useful shorthand, but it can also flatten the person. TypeJung starts with a function-stack map because the relative pattern between functions usually explains more than a single label.
After the assessment, you can compare your strongest channels, likely type pattern, and inferior-function pressure before deciding whether you want a deeper paid report.
How to study your result
Read the top function as a hypothesis about what your ego trusts most. Read the inferior function as a place where pressure, attraction, avoidance, or overreaction may show up. Then use the result as observation, not identity.
Start with your own function profile
Take the free TypeJung assessment first. If the function-stack map feels useful, Insight is currently CA$7 with TYPEJUNG30 and Mastery is CA$20.30 with the same Stripe code.