Socionics is a method of classifying personalities, and acts as the core for personality typing. It is better defined as informational metabolism, and has been used for a number of years to delimit the archetypes of the soul. Socionics was invented by an ENTp, Aušra Augustinavi?i?t?, to classify each person into their distinct purposes.
The central idea of socionics is that information is intuitively divisible into eight different categories, called information aspects or information elements, which a person's psyche processes using eight psychological functions. Each sociotype has a different correspondence between functions and information elements, which results in different ways of perceiving, processing, and producing information. This in turn results in distinct thinking patterns, values, and responses to arguments, all of which are encompassed within socionic type. Socionics' theory of intertype relations is based on the interaction of these functions between types.
https://wikisocion.github.io/
http://www.dynamicsocionics.ru/magazin-socionics/product/view/2/3.html
https://u1lib.org/book/613697/67eaaf
https://socionic.info/en/esocplac.html
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1389041717301365
The central idea of socionics is that information is intuitively divisible into eight different categories, called information aspects or information elements, which a person's psyche processes using eight psychological functions. Each sociotype has a different correspondence between functions and information elements, which results in different ways of perceiving, processing, and producing information. This in turn results in distinct thinking patterns, values, and responses to arguments, all of which are encompassed within socionic type. Socionics' theory of intertype relations is based on the interaction of these functions between types.
https://wikisocion.github.io/
http://www.dynamicsocionics.ru/magazin-socionics/product/view/2/3.html
https://u1lib.org/book/613697/67eaaf
https://socionic.info/en/esocplac.html
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1389041717301365