Celebrity Index EII-D "Empath" ジェーン・オースティン

ジェーン・オースティン

EII-D "Empath" Novelist · Britain · 18–19c

British novelist (1775–1817). In "Pride and Prejudice," "Sense and Sensibility," and "Emma" she depicted with precise psychological portraiture and irony the marriage, social norms, and women's lives of Regency England. Only six novels, yet her influence on world literature is immeasurable.

Leading Function+Fi-p (Morality & Duty)

"Sense and Sensibility," "Pride and Prejudice" — the central themes of all her works show the deep reflection on personal moral responsibility and sincerity that is the core of +Fi-p action.

Creative Function-Ne-c (Common Sense & Peace)

Quietly expressing the breadth of human goodness and spiritual potential — the core of -Ne-c creative function. A gentle appeal to the inner conscience of human beings.

Vulnerable Function 1+Se-p weak (Achievement & Protection)

Records of +Se-p weak: power, social influence, and coercive action. Concentration on inner sincerity reduced outward power-seeking behaviour.

Vulnerable Function 2-Ti-c weak (System & Transformation)

Records of -Ti-c weak: logical and systematic thoroughness. Emotional compassion and intuitive care overwhelmed logical system-building.

Quadra / Temperament / Club

Quadra: Delta Quadra (Tradition) — deep trust in individual inner sincerity and the harmony of human relationships. "Pride and Prejudice" as a story of inner growth.

Temperament: A reflective pace and quiet adaptation to outward turmoil — embodiment of the Balanced-Stable temperament. Inner quiet moral tension rather than outer emotional outbursts.

Club: Humanitarian-Artistic Club activity through literature, art, and ethics. Jane Austen's works functioned as the integration of artistic completeness and humanitarian mission.

Worldview & Attitude

The world is simple and inherently good (positivism). Trust in order and cooperation, dedication to a stable community as the premise of action. "Inner sincerity is ultimately rewarded" — optimistic humanism. Belief that genuine character will eventually be recognised despite the constraints of social convention.

Attitude toward Change: Implementing change as a realistic plan in a gradual, step-by-step manner. The direction of change shown through the novel, pursued from within Georgian England's social conventions rather than as direct political advocacy.