\relax \bibstyle{Documents/Active/book/kapalike} \ifx\hyper@anchor\@undefined \global \let \oldcontentsline\contentsline \gdef \contentsline#1#2#3#4{\oldcontentsline{#1}{#2}{#3}} \global \let \oldnewlabel\newlabel \gdef \newlabel#1#2{\newlabelxx{#1}#2} \gdef \newlabelxx#1#2#3#4#5#6{\oldnewlabel{#1}{{#2}{#3}}} \AtEndDocument{\let \contentsline\oldcontentsline \let \newlabel\oldnewlabel} \else \global \let \hyper@last\relax \fi \citation{mcpherson} \@writefile{toc}{\contentsline {section}{\numberline {1}Early Personality Theory and application}{1}{section.1}} \citation{morley} \citation{john:90} \citation{john:99} \citation{john:90} \citation{jebb } \citation{john:90} \citation{jebb } \citation{morley} \citation{morley} \@writefile{lof}{\contentsline {figure}{\numberline {1}{\ignorespaces Gideon's tests for God are an early example of a double dissociation and probably the first published example of a cross over interaction. On the first night, the wool was wet but the floor was dry. On the second night, the floor was wet but the wool was dry (Judges 6:36-40) }}{2}{figure.1}} \newlabel{gideon}{{1}{2}{Early Personality Theory and application\relax }{figure.1}{}} \@writefile{toc}{\contentsline {subsection}{\numberline {1.1}Personality taxonomies}{2}{subsection.1.1}} \@writefile{lot}{\contentsline {table}{\numberline {1}{\ignorespaces The characters of Theophrastus and the adjectives of the Big 5 show remarkable similarity. Big 5 adjectives from John \citealp {john:90}. The characters of Theophrastus are from \cite {jebb }}}{3}{table.1}} \newlabel{default}{{1}{3}{Personality taxonomies\relax }{table.1}{}} \citation{plato} \citation{hogan:07} \citation{hogan:94} \citation{hogan:90} \citation{padila:hogan:07} \@writefile{toc}{\contentsline {subsection}{\numberline {1.2}Personality and leadership effectiveness}{4}{subsection.1.2}} \citation{plato} \@writefile{toc}{\contentsline {subsection}{\numberline {1.3}Causal theories}{5}{subsection.1.3}} \@writefile{lot}{\contentsline {table}{\numberline {2}{\ignorespaces Greek/Roman causal theory of personality}}{5}{table.2}} \newlabel{default}{{2}{5}{Causal theories\relax }{table.2}{}} \@writefile{lot}{\contentsline {table}{\numberline {3}{\ignorespaces Wundt's two dimensional organization of the four temperaments}}{5}{table.3}} \newlabel{default}{{3}{5}{Causal theories\relax }{table.3}{}} \@writefile{toc}{\contentsline {subsection}{\numberline {1.4}Early methodology}{5}{subsection.1.4}} \bibdata{Documents/Active/book/psychometrics-ref}