Dominant Function According to Carl Jung

The longer I’m into personality theory, the more I’ve felt compelled to dive into Psychological Types by Carl Jung. To be honest, this article, on the dominant function, is sort of a prelude. What actually captured my interest recently was Carl Jung’s description of the auxiliary function, a subject that’s hotly debated among those who dive “Jung” deep into cognitive function theory. However, it seems disjointed to start with an article on the auxiliary function, so I’m doing this linearly, by first covering how Carl Jung described the dominant function.
Prerequisite Information
I want to keep this article focused on the dominant function, so I’m not going to lay out a bunch of groundwork, like sometimes I do. The key information that you need to understand is that Carl Jung initially identifies two general attitudes, or attitude-types, which are introversion and extraversion. He then identifies four basic psychological functions, or function-types: thinking, feeling, intuition, and sensation. These are then combined to make 8 variants, or as we call them today, the 8 cognitive functions.
Related Article: Carl Jung’s Psychological Types: A Look at the Framework
What is the Dominant Function?
Your personality type is first determined by which cognitive function takes the greatest precedence, which is why it’s referred to as the “dominant” function. It’s the one in charge of all the others, or the one that the other functions are subservient to. Carl Jung also refers to the dominant function as the primary function. Of course, every variant of Carl Jung’s theory (that I know of) includes other functions, such as an auxiliary function to further clarify one’s type. However, the starting point is always the dominant function, because it is the capstone of your personality type.
Attributes of the Dominant Function
1. There Can Only Be One
Everything filters through your dominant function first. It’s the team leader of your cognitive function stack, the one heading up the charge. If any other cognitive function were to gain equal precedence, it would create a contradiction, or at the very least, trap you in a realm of indecision. Consider the scenario of the angel on one shoulder and the devil on the other. Both are pushing opposite goals or opposing paths. You can’t function in that state. However, while people can be extremely inconsistent in their response to moral dilemmas (whether they choose the angel or the devil), your function stack is consistently your function stack, so your dominant function will be the one that rules your behavior the majority of the time. The other functions can act as advisors and counselors, but ultimately the dominant function is the one with the greatest influence.
2. Under Conscious Control
When Jung refers to the consciousness of a function, he’s not referring to an individual’s awareness of that function, but rather, their conscious control of it. We can all be aware of the products of all of our cognitive functions, but that doesn’t mean we can consciously create those products. Naturally, the dominant function is one that must be under conscious control, not just something always running wild in your mind with no reins or direction. Sure, as the most prominent function, there might be times when it’s just going and going, but to truly be someone’s dominant function, they must be able to consciously direct it to do their bidding and act on it.
3. Best Equipped By Nature
People debate whether one’s personality type is determined by genetics (nature) or molded based on circumstances (nurture). Jung was a firm believer in nature, citing that a mom can treat every baby the same, and they will all turn out differently. However, either way, whether you believe in nature or nurture, the point remains that each individual will lean into the cognitive function that they feel best equipped to use, because whatever they’re best equipped to use will give them the greatest chance at success in life. That preferred function becomes the most favored, and thus the most developed, further earning it the title of dominant function.
In the above quote, Jung specifically calls out that an individual will apply himself first and foremost to the differentiation of their preferred function, causing them to identify completely with it. This is why it’s fairly well known that people develop their dominant function early, in their younger years, and don’t start developing the auxiliary and tertiary until a little bit later. I’m going to discuss differentiation further in the next section.
Related Article: Are Personality Types Born Or Made?
4. The Most Differentiated
Differentiation essentially means developing a function’s distinctions. That process makes it separate from all the other cognitive functions. As shown in the previous section, everyone initially focuses on the differentiation of the function that they’re most predisposed to be successful with. Therefore, the dominant function ends up being the most differentiated function. If it were not differentiated, it would not be usable, because undifferentiated functions are incapable of being directed. He also explains in another section that undifferentiated functions are unable to operate on their own, because they’re all mixed up with the rest of the undifferentiated cognitive functions.
5. Elimination of the Irrelevant
The concept of eliminating the irrelevant was introduced in the previous section’s quote. In this one, he’s referring to directed functions, which includes the dominant function, as we’ve discussed. He makes a point to call out that directed functions aren’t just functions that are given sole focus, but rather, they’re functions that demand the exclusion of anything directly contradictory to it’s nature. In other words, thinking must exclude feeling, and feeling must exclude thinking. Continuing that train of thought, sensing would exclude intuition, and vice versa. This is why cognitive functions exist in pairs, with each member of a pair on opposite ends of the spectrum.
The opposition between the dominant and it’s inferior function is also why we often see a whiplash relationship between dominant and inferior functions. People will shift suddenly (or jarringly) between the two, making both fairly visible, but they’ll be unable to synchronize the two, or use them in conjunction with each other. The relationship between the auxiliary and tertiary functions is usually different, since the two often work together more seamlessly, making them harder to distinguish. Of course, this makes sense because the auxiliary function is less differentiated, making it less distinct from it’s opposing function and therefore more capable of merging with it.
No One Is A Pure Type
Jung writes this caveat towards the end of the chapter 10, after his eight cognitive function descriptions, in order to emphasize that the descriptions are extreme. The descriptions he provides are how someone might be if solely embodying their dominant function. However, anyone acting that way would be unhealthy or extremely imbalanced. Other cognitive functions exert an influence on the dominant, most namely, the auxiliary. These other functions flavor the dominant and hopefully balance it out to some degree. I’ll be discussing the auxiliary in a separate article. I called this out to emphasize that, while our dominant is our main driver, we are far more than just our dominant function.
Reference Book:
Psychological Types (The Collected Works of C. G. Jung, Vol. 6) (Bollingen Series XX)
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Great article; thanks!
This was a really interesting read, thinking about how it could relate to my Ti… the part that stuck out to me was the part on Conscious Control. Does that mean the lower functions aren’t as consciously controlled, because I have experiences…
Si: “Ooh, that horror movie scene you accidentally saw was pretty grisly. 😨 Why don’t I just create a sensory impression of that so you’ll relive this for the next year any time something even vaguely reminds you of it! 🤗”
“What!? No, I don’t want to remember that! 😖”
Si: “Too late. 🫠”
And then there are times where it forms an alliance with inferior Fe to make me relive every social faux pas I’ve ever made… though, sometimes it forms impressions of useful/good things sometimes, so… mixed bag, haha.