The Mirror is a personality assessment built on fractal mathematics. It doesn't assign you a type. It computes a precise location - your TypeSpectrum - in a continuous space where every possible human psychological configuration exists as a specific point.
Most personality tests give you a category: you're this type, or that style. The category is useful, but it compresses who you are into a box that doesn't quite fit. The Mirror works differently. It measures you across multiple independent dimensions simultaneously and finds where you actually sit - not the nearest label, but the exact coordinate.
You'll answer 31 questions in two phases. The first phase uses behavioral scenarios to identify your core patterns. The second measures your interior configuration directly - where you sit on each of the dimensions the instrument reads.
Each question asks you to select a primary response and, optionally, a secondary. The secondary captures the part of you that the primary doesn't - the complexity that a single answer can't hold. Both contribute to your result.
The computation happens on the backend. What you see at the end is the product of a multi-dimensional mathematical model that locates you precisely, not approximately.
Your result includes:
Your TypeSpectrum - a weighted blend across nine personality patterns, showing not just which is strongest but how they all relate in your specific configuration.
Four core axes - assertiveness, openness, trust, and stability - measured as continuous positions, not categories.
Framework translations - your TypeSpectrum projected into MBTI, Big Five, attachment style, and instinctual variant vocabulary, so you can see how established systems describe the same territory from their angle.
Your fractal - a Julia set generated from your computed parameter. This is the mathematical structure of your configuration, rendered visually. The fractal is not decorative. It is the geometry.
Your TypeSpectrum coordinate generates a Julia set - a fractal boundary that is mathematically unique to your configuration. No two people with different coordinates produce the same fractal. The shape, smoothness, and structure of your boundary reflect the geometry of who you are.
The Mandelbrot set - the space of all coordinates that produce connected, coherent fractal boundaries - is what we call the Purdy Consciousness Field (PCF). It is the complete space of all possible formed people. The Mirror finds your location in it.
The Mirror runs two independent measurement channels. The first reads your answers directly - what you select. The second reads what your pattern configuration looks like from the geometry of those selections - not what you said, but what the shape of your responses implies about where you sit.
The convergence score measures how closely these two channels agree. High convergence means both readings landed in the same place. Low convergence means there's a gap between what you report and what the geometry shows - which is itself meaningful information.
The computational methodology, axis architecture, and signal detection layer are proprietary to TriadTrue LLC. The instrument is designed by Andrew C. Purdy.
Two instruments. One coordinate.
A multi-dimensional geometric fractal personality approximator.
The Mirror will speak to you in the language you choose, not just translated, but written for how that language holds meaning.
Not about who you are. About the conditions you're in today. The instrument uses this to contextualize your reading, the same configuration reads differently under different conditions.
These values don't change your TypeSpectrum computation. They contextualize the output, the same fractal reads differently under different conditions.
Ten situations where two types look identical from the outside. The questions surface the driver underneath, not the behavior on top.
The type that fits you isn't the one that describes what you do. It's the one that explains why.
Twenty-one questions that probe the field directly, across the independent axes.
Answer what is true, not what you wish were true.
Select your primary response.