in October's Theory and Psychology

 

McCrae, R.R. (2009) The physics and chemistry of personality. Theory and 
Psychology, 19, 5, 670-687.

Abstract: Physics and chemistry, two basic natural sciences, are today 
seamlessly integrated, but for much of their history they were separate 
enterprises with distinct methods and goals. Physicists have consistently 
sought simplicity and mathematical rigor, whereas chemists seem to have been 
fascinated by the challenges of complexity. Parallels between these two 
sciences and the two major branches of contemporary personality psychology are 
described in an attempt to put in perspective the daunting enterprise of 
constructing a unified science of human nature.  

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