The Fool - 0/XXII type de personnalité MBTI
Personnalité
"Quel type de personnalité est The Fool - 0/XXII? The Fool - 0/XXII est un type de personnalité ENFP dans MBTI, 7w6 - sx/so - 749 dans Enneagram, SCUAI dans Big 5, IEE dans Socionics."
ESFP votes are kind of wild here lmao, and I suspect a good amount of those votes came from people voting based on stereotypes of "dumb ESFPs" (yawn) and not looking past the name of the card. Anyway, the archetype of the fool is one of fantasy, change, possibilities, and being naive to one's surroundings. Tends to be very optimistic of new ideas, not particularly grounded in reality. This all points to Ne > Se, and I find this from the Jungian Ne type to be particularly relevant here: "For a time, objects seem to have an inflated value, if they should serve to bring about a solution, a deliverance, or lead to the discovery of a new possibility". This is a pretty apt description of the fool archetype, curious and open to new ideas with an aspect of being unrealistic or naive (specifically referring to the idea of an "inflated value" here). The idealism is inherent to the archetype, and Se dominance is too realistic in worldview to fit. "The dog at his heels barks at him in warning, and if he does not become more aware of his surroundings soon, he may never see all the adventures that he dreams of encountering." Again this is someone out of touch with the sensory world, lost in abstract idealistic fantasy with a huge amount of curiosity, and arguably the dog could represent inferior Si (or simply unvalued Se, but I think it works better as a representation of the inferior).
Biographie
An extravagantly-dressed young man strays obliviously close to the edge of a cliff, with a white dog at his heels, which seems to be either warning him of the looming danger ahead, or eagerly accompanying him. His posture is open, and embraces all that life has to offer him, untainted by preconceptions and uncumbered by others' disapproval. He holds a white rose, a symbol of divine love, innocence, purity, and faith. The Trickster as often as an innocent protected by his own luck, a madman who speaks with the voice of gods, the village idiot who hides strange powers, a happy-go-lucky adventurer that is missing something deep inside of him, which is the growth and change that will result from the peril and challenges that reality will soon thrust upon him, or simply a Naïve Newcomer. The Fool is a symbol of the in-between, great untapped potential, of The Grotesque, of reliance on luck. This card represents the enthusiasm and openness that a person often has when embarking on a new pursuit. It all starts with a leap of faith and a journey of self-discovery, and a reminder to expect the unexpected. There's no need to manipulate a specific outcome, just breathe it all in and try to see the big picture and enjoy your journey. The dark side of the Fool is someone foolhardy, immature, and overenthusiastic, someone who takes huge risks without a plan, who jumps to conclusions and who lets their dreams and flights of fancy lead them astray, or into dangerous places (without a figurative parachute to break the fall in case anything goes wrong), someone who chooses to remain ignorant and stagnant to be blissful, or someone who is too jaded and closed-off to even bother to improve themselves and embark on new journeys. Historical sidenote: The Fool's role in the trick taking card games which gave rise to the modern Tarot deck was unique: The card always lost, but also was always a valid play, thus making the card both worthless at the tactical level and immensely valuable at the strategic level (you could avoid playing a card that could win a later round if you had already lost this round). Before the Rider-Waite-Smith deck, the Fool was traditionally unnumbered; Rider-Waite (and many decks that followed its lead) assigned it the number 0 (and thus, the sole Arabic numeral in the Major Arcana), although some decks assign it XXII instead.








