A First-Rate Madness

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A First-Rate Madness Page 38

by Nassir Ghaemi


  partition of

  Insel, Thomas

  In Sickness and in Power (Owen)

  integrative complexity

  Iraq war

  Ismay, Hastings

  Jackson, Jesse

  Jackson, Robert

  Jackson, Thomas J. “Stonewall”

  Jacobsen, Max

  James, Henry

  James, William

  Jamison, Kay Redfield

  Jaspers, Karl

  Jefferson, Thomas

  Jenkins, Roy

  Jinnah, Mohammad Ali

  Johnson, Andrew

  Johnson, Lyndon

  Johnson, Samuel

  Johnston, Joseph

  Jordan, Sara

  Katzenbach, Nicholas

  Kelley, Douglas

  Kennedy, Caroline

  Kennedy, David

  Kennedy, Edward

  Kennedy, Eunice

  Kennedy, Jackie

  Kennedy, John F.

  depressive episodes of

  drug treatment of

  early political career of

  family mental health history of

  hyperthymic traits of

  illness of

  intelligence of

  libido of

  media relations of

  Nixon’s relationship with

  presidency of

  resilience of

  West Berlin speech of

  wit of

  youth of

  Kennedy, John F., Jr.

  Kennedy, Joseph, Jr.

  Kennedy, Joseph P., Sr.

  Kennedy, Kathleen

  Kennedy, Michael

  Kennedy, Patrick

  Kennedy, Robert F.

  Kennedy, Robert F., Jr.

  Kennedy, Rose

  Kennedy, Rosemary

  Kessler, Ronald

  Khrushchev, Nikita

  Kierkegaard, Soren

  King, Martin Luther, Jr.

  composure of

  course of illness of

  depressive symptoms of

  empathy of

  Kennedy’s first meeting with

  political agenda of

  political philosophy of

  realism of

  suicide attempts of

  Kinnock, Neil

  Kitchen, Martin

  Koestler, Arthur

  Korean War

  Kraus, Hans

  Kretschmer, Ernst

  Kroner, Karl

  Kubizek, August

  Lakoff, George

  Landon, Alf

  Langer, Ellen

  Langer, Walter C.

  leadership:

  and abnormal personality

  business

  differing psychological requirements for

  empathy and

  hubris and

  mental health and

  mental illness and

  non-crisis

  Lee, Bernard

  Lee, Robert E.

  LeHand, Missy

  Lewinsky, Monica

  Lewis, David

  Lewis, John

  Liddell-Hart, B. H.

  Lifton, Robert

  Lincoln, Abraham

  course of illness of

  depressive symptoms of

  empathy of

  family mental health history of

  political career of

  realism of

  treatment of

  Lincoln, Evelyn

  Lincoln, Willie

  Lincoln’s Melancholy (Shenk)

  Linge, Heinz

  Lipps, Theodor

  lithium

  Lloyd George, David

  Lodge, Henry Cabot

  Lombroso, Cesare

  Londonderry, Lord

  Longstreet, James

  Lowell, Robert

  Lowery, Joseph

  Lurker, Otto

  macaques, empathy in

  McCain, John

  McClellan, Ellen

  McClellan, George

  MacDonald, Ramsay

  McGovern, George

  Macmillan, Harold

  MacMurray, John

  McPherson, James

  Maher, Brendan

  Manchester, William

  Mandela, Nelson

  mania

  abnormal personality and

  amphetamines and

  antidepressant-induced

  causes of

  concealment of

  creativity enhanced by

  depression linked to

  drug-induced

  drug treatments for

  elements of

  gradations of

  leadership and

  political stigma and

  sexual behavior affected by

  social implications of

  symptoms of

  theories about

  see also bipolar disorder; hyperthymia

  manic-depressive illness, see bipolar disorder

  Mansfield, Richard

  Marlborough, “Sunny,” ninth Duke of

  Marshall, Burke

  Marshall, George

  Martin, Louis

  Matter of Character, A (Kessler)

  Meade, George

  Meaney, George

  media

  Kennedy’s relations with

  Roosevelt’s relations with

  medicine, diagnosis in

  Mein Kampf (Hitler)

  Memoirs (Grant)

  Memoirs (Sherman)

  Mencken, H. L.

  Menninger, William

  mental health:

  illusion and

  leadership and

  standard of

  see also homoclites

  mental heuristics and biases

  mental illness:

  benefits of

  Civil War–era treatment for

  drug treatments for

  drug use and

  elements of

  leadership and

  legal meaning of

  modern approach to

  Nazism and

  resilience enhanced by

  social context of

  stigma attached to

  types of

  see also specific conditions

  Mercer, Lucy

  Meredith, James

  methyltestosterone, Kennedy’s use of

  Meyer, Mary

  mirror neurons

  monogamy

  Moran, Charles Wilson, Lord

  Morell, Theodor

  multiple personality

  Mussolini, Benito

  Nagasaki

  Napoleon III, emperor of France

  narcissism

  narcotics:

  Hitler’s use of

  Kennedy’s use of

  National Institute of Mental Health

  Nazism:

  British response to

  Chamberlain’s reaction to

  Churchill’s reaction to

  Gandhi’s response to

  German resistance to

  mental illness and

  Roosevelt’s philosophical viewpoint on

  see also Hitler, Adolf

  Nehru, Jawaharlal

  neurosis

  neurosyphilis

  neuroticism

  New Deal

  New Orleans Times

  Newsweek

  Newton, Huey P.

  New York Post

  New York Times Magazine

  Nietzsche, Friedrich

  Nixon, Richard

  Kennedy’s relationship with

  mental health of

  political career of

  psychoanalytic evaluations of

  treatment of

  nonviolent resistance

  in civil rights movement

  collapse of

  Gandhi’s strategy of

  Oates, Stephen

  Obama, Barack

  obsessionality

  O’Donnell, Kenneth

  openness to experience

  opiates, Hitler’s use ofr />
  Osler, William

  Owen, David

  oxycodone

  oxytocin

  Papen, Franz von

  Parkinson’s disease

  pathology

  PBS

  penicillin, in neurosyphilis treatment

  Perkins, Frances

  Perlstein, Rick

  personality:

  abnormal

  disorders of

  traits of

  see also cyclothymia; dysthymia; hyperthymia

  Pinel, Philippe

  Pittman, Frank

  Plutarch

  polio

  post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)

  Poussaint, Alvin

  Powers, David

  pregnancy, false

  procaine, Kennedy’s use of

  Profiles in Courage (Kennedy)

  Prozac

  psychiatry:

  case history approach in

  causality in

  evidence in

  modern

  social constructs in

  psychoanalysis

  of Hitler

  limitations of

  of Nixon

  see also Freud, Sigmund

  psychohistory

  psychology:

  diagnostic trends in

  political beliefs and

  Psychology of Politics, The (Eysenck)

  psychosis

  drug-induced

  empathy and

  Raubal, Angela Hitler

  Raubal, Geli

  Reagan, Ronald

  realism

  depressive

  Reconstruction

  Redlich, Fritz

  Reeves, Richard

  religion, and homoclites

  resilience

  in children

  drugs and

  factors supporting

  hyperthymia and

  mental illness and

  parental death and

  physical illness and

  Reston, James

  Ribbentrop, Joachim von

  Richards, Ann

  risk-taking:

  hyperthymia and

  mania and

  resilience and

  see also openness to experience

  Rizzolatti, Giacomo

  Rockefeller, Nelson

  Rommel, Erwin

  Romney, George

  Roosevelt, Eleanor

  Roosevelt, Franklin D.

  empathy of

  family mental health history of

  hyperthymic traits of

  intellect of

  leadership style of

  libido of

  media relations of

  physical disability of

  political career of

  political philosophy of

  resilience of

  sleep habits of

  sociability of

  talkativeness of

  wit of

  Roosevelt, Isaac

  Roosevelt, James

  Roosevelt, Theodore

  Rorschach tests

  Rosenbaum, Ron

  Rosenberg, Alfred

  Roth, Jane

  Rundstedt, Gerd von

  Rustin, Bayard

  Safire, William

  St. John, George

  Salerian, Alen

  Salinger, Pierre

  satyagraha, see nonviolent resistance

  Schenck, Ernst-Gunther

  schizophrenia

  Scott, Winfield

  self-esteem, and mania

  Seligman, Martin

  September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks of

  post-traumatic stress disorder following

  Seward, William

  sexual abuse:

  repressed memory of

  resilience from

  sexual behavior:

  drugs and

  hyperthymia and

  mania and

  monogamous

  oxytocin’s role in

  political morals and

  sexually transmitted diseases

  Shanks, William

  Shenk, Joshua Wolf

  Sherman, Ellen Ewing

  Sherman, John

  Sherman, William Tecumseh

  Civil War career of

  Civil War strategy of

  creativity of

  early career of

  empathy of

  family mental health history of

  manic-depressive episodes of

  realism of

  Sidey, Hugh

  Silent Majority

  Simon, John

  Simonton, Dean Keith

  slavery, Lincoln’s position on

  Smathers, George

  Smith, Al

  Smith, John

  Social Security

  Sorensen, Ted

  Speer, Albert

  ”split-brain” research

  Stalin, Joseph

  Stelazine

  Stephens, Philip

  steroids

  anabolic

  bipolar disorder’s interaction with

  Hitler’s use of

  hyperthymia’s interaction with

  Kennedy’s use of

  libido enhancement by

  Stevenson, Adlai

  Stocker Verlag

  Storr, Anthony

  stress, and depression

  success

  suicide:

  adolescent

  in Churchill family

  depression and

  Sullivan, Harry Stack

  Swanson, Gloria

  symptoms

  Taylor, Eugene

  Taylor, Shelley

  Taylor, Zachary

  temperament, see personality

  terrorism, post-traumatic stress disorder resulting from

  testosterone, Kennedy’s use of

  Thatcher, Margaret

  Thompson, Hunter S.

  Thorazine

  Thurman, Howard

  Time

  Time Warner

  trauma

  see also post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)

  Travell, Janet

  treatment

  see also drugs

  Trevor-Roper, Hugh

  Truman, Harry

  Turner, Ed

  Turner, Ted

  bipolar symptoms of

  business career of

  childhood of

  creativity of

  family mental health history of

  Unfinished Life, An (Dallek)

  Vaillant, George

  Victor Emmanuel III, king of Italy

  Vidal, Gore

  Villard, Henry

  virtue

  voles, monogamy in

  Wachtel, Harry

  Wallace, George

  warfare:

  modern transformation of

  Napoleonic tactics in

  psychological terror in

  see also Civil War, U.S.; World War II

  Washington, George

  Watergate

  Watts, James

  Webb, Edwin

  Webster, Daniel

  Weiss, Eduard

  Westen, Drew

  Westminster, Duke of

  White, Theodore

  Wilder, Thornton

  Wilkins, Roy

  Willkie, Wendell

  Willmans, Karl

  Wilson, Woodrow

  Wolf, Paula

  Woodrow Wilson (Freud and Bullitt)

  Woodruff, Judy

  Wootton, Tom

  World War I

  World War II

  Gandhi’s stance in

  Hitler’s leadership in

  mentally ill leaders in

  post-traumatic stress disorder in

  Roosevelt’s leadership in

  ”total war” practices in

  see also Nazism

  Young, Andrew

 

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