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 Warâera 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 of
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