The Lenore Thomson Exegesis Wiki: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Yaron Koren (talk | contribs) (Changed status to "Cannot connect") |
m (Text replace - "(\|) *wiki_" to "$1") |
||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Wiki | {{Wiki | ||
| | |name=Lenore Thomson Exegesis Wiki | ||
| | |logo=http://greenlightwiki.com/lenore-logo.gif | ||
| | |URL=http://greenlightwiki.com/lenore-exegesis | ||
| | |recentchanges_URL=http://greenlightwiki.com/lenore-exegesis/RecentChanges? | ||
| | |wikinode_URL=No | ||
| | |status=Cannot connect | ||
| | |language=English | ||
| | |editmode=OpenEdit | ||
| | |engine=Green Light Wiki | ||
| | |maintopic=Medical | ||
}} | }} | ||
==Description== | ==Description== | ||
Lenore Thomson is the author of ''Personality Type: An Owner's Manual'', a book that takes the Myers-Briggs personality type system back to its roots in Jungian psychology. Or perhaps redefines Myers-Briggs as a vocabulary for analyzing politics and public discourse. We don't really know. On this web site, we try to figure out what she's talking about. | Lenore Thomson is the author of ''Personality Type: An Owner's Manual'', a book that takes the Myers-Briggs personality type system back to its roots in Jungian psychology. Or perhaps redefines Myers-Briggs as a vocabulary for analyzing politics and public discourse. We don't really know. On this web site, we try to figure out what she's talking about. | ||
Revision as of 21:45, 4 April 2012
| http://greenlightwiki.com/lenore-logo.gif | Lenore Thomson Exegesis Wiki [{{{recentchanges URL}}} Recent changes] [No WikiNode] [No About] [No Mobile URL] |
|---|---|
| Status: | Cannot connect |
| Language: | English |
| Edit mode: | OpenEdit |
| Wiki engine: | Green Light Wiki |
| Wiki license: | [[:Category:Wiki {{{license}}}|{{{license}}}]] |
| Main topic: | Medical |
Description
Lenore Thomson is the author of Personality Type: An Owner's Manual, a book that takes the Myers-Briggs personality type system back to its roots in Jungian psychology. Or perhaps redefines Myers-Briggs as a vocabulary for analyzing politics and public discourse. We don't really know. On this web site, we try to figure out what she's talking about.