
Intellectual
Principle: Intellectual This principle leans toward making sense of life through thought, analysis, and ideas. Rather than “fate,” it often describes a preferred way of coping—using curiosity, reasoning, and mental frameworks to gain steadiness, clarity, and agency.
4 areas it may touch1) Relationships: mind-to-mind bonding; you may seek stimulating dialogue and feel most understood when partners “get” your thinking.2) Work/Calling: strong drive for mastery, learning, and problem-solving; you may do best where ideas translate into real outcomes.3) Emotional life: feelings may be processed through reflection; journaling or theory can help, but overthinking can create distance from needs.4) Decision-making: you may weigh options carefully; decisions may feel easier when supported by evidence, ethics, or coherent logic.



























