Thich Nhat Hanh
EII-D "共感者" Buddhist · Vietnam · 20–21cVietnamese Zen monk and peace activist (1926–2022). During the Vietnam War he carried out non-violent peace activities and went into exile. Spread mindfulness practice to the West. Founded Plum Village in France. Works: "Interbeing," "The Miracle of Mindfulness." Known as "Thầy" (Teacher).
主導機能+Fi-p (Morality & Duty)
During the Vietnam War, "anger is the compost of understanding" — deep reflection on personal moral responsibility as the core of +Fi-p action. Moral care directed toward specific human beings.
創造機能-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.
脆弱機能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.
脆弱機能2-Ti-c weak (System & Transformation)
Records of -Ti-c weak: logical and systematic thoroughness. Emotional compassion and intuitive care overwhelmed logical system-building.
クアドラ・気質・クラブ
クアドラ: Delta Quadra (Tradition) — deep trust in human suffering as a spiritual value. Engaged Buddhism as a form of social practice connecting inner and outer peace.
気質: "Patient, slow to anger, tolerant" and "calm, stable, relaxed" — overwhelming evidence of the Balanced-Stable temperament. For 40 years of exile he maintained his practice of mindfulness.
クラブ: Humanitarian-Artistic Club activity through literature, art, and ethics. Thich Nhất Hạnh's work functioned as the integration of artistic completeness and humanitarian mission.
世界観・変化への態度
The world is simple and inherently good (positivism). Trust in order and cooperation, dedication to a stable community as the premise of action. "Inner and outer peace is possible through mindfulness" — optimistic pacifism. Belief that the suffering of war and division can be transcended through inner practice.
変化への態度: Implementing change as a realistic plan in a gradual, step-by-step manner. Rejection of participation in the Vietnam War and the founding of engaged Buddhism pursued through daily mindfulness practice.
