Hercules MBTI 성격 유형
인격
"Hercules은 어떤 성격 유형입니까? Hercules은 mbti의 ESFJ 성격 유형입니다. enneagram의 3w2 - so/sx - 936, big 5의 SCOAN, socionics의 ESE입니다."
[My usual disclaimer: My typing method incorporates concepts from the Cognitive Type system. While CT is Jungian-derived, it does not share a 1-to-1 relationship with standard Jungian systems.] From CT's Behaviorism and Mythology article on Fe: "The spiritual experience of Fe […] is a psychological archetype appearing as the Hero, which is a specific mythical protagonist who endures a series of impossible challenges, confrontations with evil, and is often tasked with ascending to power. Examples of this archetype include Odysseus, Hercules and Gilgamesh." This may not be a strict adaptation of the Hercules myth, but the essential character archetype is the same, and every aspect of the description above is still applicable to the Disney version of Hercules. There are also a few things to consider regarding psychodynamics: Fe's version of causal reality (how objects affect one another) is implicitly tied to some kind of social economy or other willful force that co-opts the self, but which nevertheless exists outside the self. The very notion of being a "hero" springs more naturally from this Fe mindset than that of any other function; the term itself is often suggestive of a person that has been co-opted into public service and whose actions are worthy of the highest honor. A hero is inherently an icon of, and an avatar for public sentiment. The fact that Hercules consciously adopts this role, with full knowledge of everything that it means, is indicative of high conscious Fe. I think the theme of "going the distance," which is prominent throughout the movie, is indicative of a striving, transcendental mindset that is also specific to Fe. Any type can undergo self-improvement, but where an Fi type will see this as realignment with the true, inner self, Fe will see this as a remolding of the self entirely, something akin to "becoming more." This is possible because Fe does not interpret living objects as fixed centralities; they can be aligned with the objective and reshaped from the outside in. This idea is carried through to the climax of the movie: Hercules does not become immortal due to some kind of revelation of his true self. Rather, this is a transcendent change in his state of being that is *earned* through his willful/sentimental engagement with objective factors. Why Si––Ne? In this case, it has more to do with Ne. Hercules lacks the perceptive intensity that types with Se tend to have. Whereas Se tends to lock onto perceptive targets, even objects that the individual finds irritating, Ne has a looser focus that tends to continuously correlate objects with other objects; in other words, Ne types tend to zone out. This is played up for comedic effect after Meg kisses Hercules. Riding on the back of Pegasus (and looking backwards), he is seeing objects in front of his eyes, but they are not literally the objects in front of his eyes. His mind is disconnecting from literal reality, spinning an alternative graphic dataset that was nevertheless triggered by something in the objective realm. There are a lot of other examples of this throughout the movie; Hercules has a tendency to engage with new objects passively and clumsily, seemingly distracted by the "real action" taking place somewhere else in his mind.
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Hercules is the titular protagonist of Disney's 1997 animated feature film of the same name. The son of Zeus and Hera, Hercules was abducted from Mount Olympus and turned mortal by his evil uncle Hades, though he maintained his mighty strength. With the help of Pegasus and Philoctetes, Hercules sets out on a journey of self-discovery and acceptance, from klutzy "zero" to prove himself a true hero and reclaim his place among the gods. Despite his incomparable power and fame throughout Ancient Greece, Hercules initially believed being a hero would simply be battling monsters and rescuing damsels. It wouldn't be until his chance encounter with the femme fatale Megara that Hercules would come to understand the true measure of a hero. He battled a series of monsters sent by Hades, but what made him a real hero is his self-sacrifice.























