Ti-Se-Di

"Regulation" Hard DeclarationPractical Management

Regulation
"Combining "quiet lawyer" and "silent guard" — The Enforcer"
Norm maintenance, loyalty line, order audit, responsibility division, procedure hardening, long-term stability
Traits of Regulation
합리
合理
정적
静的
과감
果敢
명랑
陽気
감정주의
感情主義
낙관
気楽
완고
頑固
프로세스
プロセス
긍정주의
肯定主義
귀족주의
貴族主義
Balanced-stable
균형-안정
Rationality is a perceptual style that focuses on decision-making, emotional expression
• Tends to plan ahead and make decisions early
• Strong-willed and may appear stubborn to others
• Reluctant to change once a decision has been made
• Shows a strong tendency to follow through on commitments
• Movements appear controlled and deliberate
• Leadership style tends toward authority (top-down)
• Relatively lower stress tolerance
Static types tend to perceive the world as a collection of states, focusing on the prop
• Tends to perceive the world as a set of "states" rather than continuous processes
• Focuses on stability and inherent qualities rather than change
• Remembers events as independent scenes or snapshots rather than as a continuous flow
• Places importance on fixed structures of states and relationships
• Pays attention to simultaneity ("what existed at this moment") rather than cause-and-effect

Characteristic Behaviors and Cognition
• Recalls memories as "still images" or discrete scenes
• Has
Decisive types are naturally in an action-ready state, preferring to act first and adju
Basic Characteristics
• Natural state: combat mode (ready to move)
• Adjusts while in motion (decide quickly → proceed → adjust as needed)
• Tries to finish things in one burst, maintaining focus for extended periods
• Even after completing a task, has difficulty winding down; switching gears takes time
• Focuses on execution and results; pays relatively little attention to the preparation phase
• Places importance on rewards, outcomes, and results (e.g., compensation amounts)

Typical Phrases
Merry types naturally read emotional atmospheres and prioritize subjective frameworks o
Emotions and Relationships
• Naturally reads emotional atmospheres and is sensitive to the mood of a setting
• Treats "fun" as an independent element separate from activities themselves
• Builds relationships naturally without formality, as long as there is a clear purpose
• Places relatively little importance on formal information like names and titles

Worldview and Judgment Style
• Values subjective standards over absolute notions of correctness
• Tries to understand others' perspectives by
Emotivist types prioritize the emotional atmosphere in conversation, naturally working
Conversation and Relationships
• Prioritizes the emotional atmosphere in conversation, working to adjust the mood and interpersonal dynamics
• May stray from the topic at hand to keep the atmosphere positive and engaging
• In dialogue, first aims to create a sense of psychological safety and comfortable ambiance

Relationship with Emotions
• Has a strong drive to seek new experiences and emotions: "I want to encounter the unknown"
• Rarely re-reads books or re-watches movies (loses interest wit
Carefree types make decisions on the fly based on available information and current cir
Characteristics
• Makes flexible, on-the-spot judgments based on current information and circumstances
• Constructs new approaches (algorithms) for each problem as it arises
• Values "adapting in the moment" over "preparing in advance"
• Naturally incorporates the path to a solution in their answers (without explaining every step)
• Operates from the fundamental stance that "predicting everything is impossible"
• Prioritizes "what can be done right here and now" over past knowledge or broad bac
Obstinate types treat their interests and passions as sacred and non-negotiable, while
Core Values
• Interests (goals, passions) are sacred and inviolable
• Resources (possessions, abilities) are flexible tools to be utilized

Behavioral and Psychological Characteristics
• When interested in something, refuses to give up even when resources are lacking: "If I don't have enough, I'll keep working until I do"
• Holds strong attachment and sense of identity toward personal interests, preferences, and principles
• Relatively unbothered when others use their possessions or time, but r
Process types approach tasks sequentially and step by step, immersing themselves in the
Key Characteristics
• Approaches things sequentially and in stages
• Finds it difficult to stop once they have committed to something
• Easily becomes immersed in a process, entering fully into the situation
• A "single-tasker" who focuses on one thing at a time
• Tends to read books and information from beginning to end in order

Speech Tendencies and Vocabulary
• Prefers words like "flow," "process," "step by step," and "in progress"
• Often says things like "I'm still in the middle of it" or
Positivist types perceive the world in terms of what exists and what has been achieved,
Cognitive and Expressive Tendencies
• Perceives things in terms of "what exists" and "what has been accomplished"
• Seeks to optimize and polish what is already in place
• Relatively open and positive in approach when meeting new people
• Uses affirmative expressions more than negative ones ("can do," "there is," etc.)
• Even when pointing out problems, adds a complementary positive note: "this exists, but so does that"

Examples (Affirmative Framing)
• "This glass is half full"
• "We've alread
Aristocratic types tend to perceive people through the lens of group membership. Initia
• Tends to perceive others through labels and group affiliations such as "from such-and-such background" or "in such-and-such field"
• Places importance on hierarchy and position within groups, and the distinction between "us" and "them"
• Frequently uses expressions like "that person is a typical representative of such-and-such"
• Friendships and trust are influenced by how they evaluate the group a person is perceived to belong to
• Comfortable with both self and others being described in ter
균형 잡히고 안정적인 기질. 감정의 기복이 적고 꾸준하며, 일관된 페이스를 유지합니다.
Types with this as a basic function

Characteristics of People Strong in This Function

Positive Traits (Healthy Range)

【Enforcer】
Protects the group with the bones of law and the skin of order
Combines the quiet lawyer and the silent guard
Merges normative logic with quiet order monitoring

【Compliance Officer】
Revises procedure manuals for new law compliance
Quietly audits the organization to solidify adherence
Norm maintenance & loyalty line

【Operations Governance Lead】
Detects authority overreach in organizations
Immediately strengthens regulations and procedures
Order auditing & responsibility partitioning

【Long-Term Project Governance Guardian】
Detects role encroachment
Prevents team friction through "re-declaration of authority boundaries"
Procedure hardening & long-term stability

【Stabilizer】
Conserves long-term order and compliance
Operational norms with zero omissions
Clear lines of responsibility

【Information Accumulator】
Accumulates daily deviation logs to strengthen systems
Simultaneously solidifies system structure x behavioral boundaries
Long-term sense of security

Neutral Traits

【Norm-Oriented】
"Norm maintenance" "Clause addition" "Authority fixation"
Positive: Clarity & responsibility — Negative: Rigid & inflexible

【Order-Oriented】
"Order monitoring" "Discipline compliance" "Boundary setting"
Positive: Stability & reliability — Negative: Lack of flexibility & creativity constraints

【Positivist】
"System strengthening" "Long-term stability" "Sense of security"
Positive: Stability & trust — Negative: Resistance to change & conservative

【Introverted】
"Rational / Introverted / Static"
Positive: Quiet enforcement & deep responsibility — Negative: Reserved & inconspicuous

Negative Traits (Pathological Range)

【Mild】
Intensified perfectionism — "until norms are complete"
Excessive monitoring, loss of flexibility

【Moderate】
Runaway normativism — attacking every deviation
Destruction of relationships — "Rules are everything"

【Severe】
Complete isolation, health deterioration
Complete loss of emotions, collapse of flexibility

【Path to Recovery】
Accepting moderate flexibility — understanding that "it doesn't have to be perfect"
Rebuilding relationships, developing complementary functions (Fe/Ne)

Differences by Developmental Stage

【Early Stage: Individual Use Period (Childhood to Early Adolescence)】
Using +Ti-p and -Se-c sequentially — "first maintain norms, then monitor order"
Takes time, requires externalization
Strengthening: Diverse inputs (+Ti-p), diverse outputs (-Se-c)

【Mid Stage: Easy Coordination Period (Late Adolescence to Early Adulthood)】
Coordination becomes easier — "maintaining norms while monitoring order" becomes possible
Norm maintenance → immediate order monitoring
Strengthening: Diverse thinking & contemplation (Correlator)

【Late Stage: Integration Period (Late Adulthood to Middle Age)】
Gradually blending — formation of Causal Determinism
Unified as "norms and loyalty"
Improving intuitive accuracy through experience

【Mature Stage: Full Integration Period (Middle Age to Old Age)】
Finally becomes one process
Norm maintenance immediately accompanied by order monitoring
Grasping normative gaps and order deviations at a glance and fixing them
Years of experience and wisdom, mentoring younger people