<
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Cognitive
functions
strong
><
span
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also
referred
to
as
 
span
><
strong
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psychological
functions
strong
><
span
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;">,
as
described
by
 
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><
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title
="
Carl
Jung
"
href
="
https
://
en
.
wikipedia
.
org
/
wiki
/
Carl_Jung
">
Carl
Jung
a
><
span
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in
his
book
 
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><
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;"><
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title
="
Psychological
Types
"
href
="
https
://
en
.
wikipedia
.
org
/
wiki
/
Psychological_Types
">
Psychological
Types
a
>
em
><
span
style
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;">,
are
particular
mental
processes
within
a
person
'
s
psyche
that
are
present
regardless
of
common
circumstance
.
span
><
sup
id
="
cite_ref
-
FOOTNOTEJung1971chpt
.
_11_1
-
0
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="
reference
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sup
><
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;"> 
This
was
a
concept
that
served
as
one
of
the
conceptual
foundations
for
his
theory
on
 
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><
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:
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:
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;
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-
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:
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-
origin
:
initial
;
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-
clip
:
initial
;
font
-
family
:
sans
-
serif
;"
title
="
Personality
type
"
href
="
https
://
en
.
wikipedia
.
org
/
wiki
/
Personality_type
">
personality
type
a
><
span
style
="
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:
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;
font
-
family
:
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-
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;">.
In
his
book
,
he
noted
four
main
psychological
functions
span
><
em
style
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;">
thinking
em
><
span
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:
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-
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:
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;">, 
span
><
em
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:
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:
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;">
feeling
em
><
span
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:
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:
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;">, 
span
><
em
style
="
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:
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-
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:
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-
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;">
sensation
em
><
span
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:
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;">,
and
 
span
><
em
style
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:
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;">
intuition
em
><
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;">.
He
introduced
them
with
having
either
an
internally
focused
(
span
><
em
style
="
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:
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;
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-
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:
sans
-
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;"><
a
style
="
text
-
decoration
-
line
:
none
;
color
:
#
0b0080
;
background
:
none
;"
title
="
Extraversion
and
introversion
"
href
="
https
://
en
.
wikipedia
.
org
/
wiki
/
Extraversion_and_introversion
#
Introversion
">
introverted
a
>
em
><
span
style
="
color
:
#
222222
;
font
-
family
:
sans
-
serif
;">)
or
externally
focused
(
span
><
em
style
="
color
:
#
222222
;
font
-
family
:
sans
-
serif
;"><
a
style
="
text
-
decoration
-
line
:
none
;
color
:
#
0b0080
;
background
:
none
;"
title
="
Extraversion
and
introversion
"
href
="
https
://
en
.
wikipedia
.
org
/
wiki
/
Extraversion_and_introversion
#
Extraversion
">
extraverted
a
>
em
><
span
style
="
color
:
#
222222
;
font
-
family
:
sans
-
serif
;">)
tendency
which
he
called
"
attitudes
".<
br
/><
br
/>
But
current
cognitive
sciences
rather
tend
to
speak
about
cognitive
processes
:
these
include
problem
solving
,
...<
br
/><
br
/>
span
>