Psychopathography of Adolf Hitler
Psychopathography of Adolf Hitler is an umbrella term for psychiatric (pathographic, psychobiographic) literature that deals with the hypothesis that the German Führer and Reichskanzler Adolf Hitler (1889–1945) suffered from a mental illness. Both during his lifetime and after his death, Hitler has often been associated with mental disorders such as hysteria, megalomania or paranoid schizophrenia. Psychiatrists and psychoanalysts who have diagnosed Hitler as having mental disturbance include well-known figures such as Walter C. Langer and Erich Fromm. Other researchers, such as Fritz Redlich, have concluded that Hitler probably did not suffer from these disorders.
Difficulty of psychopathography in general and of Hitler’s psychopathography in particular
In psychiatry, pathography has a bad reputation, especially diagnostics that have been carried out ex post without the direct examination of the patient.[1] It is even considered to be unethical (see Goldwater rule).[2] The German psychiatrist Hans Bürger-Prinz (University of Hamburg) went so far as to state that any remote diagnostics constitute a “fatal abuse of psychiatry”.[3] The immense range of mental disorders that Hitler has been credited with over time gives a good idea how error-prone this method is (see table).[4] Another indicator for the quality issues of many of the subsequently mentioned Hitler-pathographies is an either completely missing or grossly abbreviated discussion of the abundance of publications that have already been submitted on this subject by other authors.
Alleged disorder | Author(s) |
---|---|
Hysteria, histrionic personality disorder | Wilmanns (1933), Murray (1943), Langer (1943), Binion (1976), Tyrer (1993) |
Schizophrenia, paranoia | Vernon (1942), Murray (1943), Treher (1966), Schwaab (1992), Tyrer (1993), Coolidge/Davis/Segal (2007) |
Psychotic symptoms due to drug abuse | Heston/Heston (1980) |
Psychotic symptoms due to physical illness | Gibbels (1994), Hesse (2001), Hayden (2003) |
Psychopathy, antisocial personality disorder | Bychowski (1948), Henry/Geary/Tyrer (1993), Coolidge/Davis/Segal (2007) |
Narcissistic personality disorder | Sleigh (1966), Bromberg/Small (1983), Coolidge/Davis/Segal (2007) |
Sadistic personality disorder | Coolidge/Davis/Segal (2007) |
Borderline personality disorder | Bromberg/Small (1983), Victor (1999), Dorpat (2003), Coolidge/Davis/Segal (2007) |
Post-traumatic stress disorder | Dorpat (2003), Koch-Hillebrecht (2003), Vinnai (2004), Coolidge/Davis/Segal (2007) |
Abnormal brain lateralization | Martindale/Hasenfus/Hines (1976) |
Schizotypal personality disorder | Rappaport (1975), Waite (1977) |
Dangerous leader disorder | Mayer (1993) |
Bipolar disorder | Hershman/Lieb (1994) |
Asperger syndrome | Fitzgerald (2004) |
In the case of Hitler, psychopathography poses particular problems. First, authors who write about Hitler's most personal matters have to deal with the threat that a possibly voyeuristic readership uncritically accepts even the most sparsely proven speculations – such as for example happened in the case of Lothar Machtan’s book The Hidden Hitler (2001).[5] Even more grave, secondly, is the warning put forward by some authors that pathologizing Hitler would inevitably mean to discharge him of at least some of his responsibility.[6] Others have feared that by pathologizing or demonizing Hitler on the contrary all the blame could easily be relocated on the mad dictator, while the misguided "masses" and the power elites who had been working with him would be relieved.[7] Famed is Hannah Arendt’s coinage of the phrase the "banality of evil"; in 1963, she ruled that for a Nazi perpetrator as Adolf Eichmann, mental normality and the ability to commit mass murder were not mutually exclusive.[8] In his 2015 biography, Peter Longerich pointed out how Hitler implemented his political goals as a strong dictator, with assertiveness, high readiness to assume risk and unlimited power.[9] Some authors were fundamentally opposed to any attempt to explain Hitler, for example by psychological means.[10] Claude Lanzman went further, labeling such attempts "obscene"; after the completion of his film Shoah (1985) he felt such attempts bordered on Holocaust denial, he especially criticized the historian Rudolph Binion.[11]
As the psychiatrist Jan Ehrenwald has pointed out, the question often has been neglected as to how a possibly mentally ill Hitler could have been able to win millions of enthusiastic followers that supported his policies until 1945.[12] Daniel Goldhagen argued in 1996 that Hitler's political ascent was not so much made possible by his psychopathology, but rather by the precarious social conditions that existed at that time in Germany.[13] Some authors have on the contrary noted that people like Charles Manson or Jim Jones who have been described as suffering from crippling mental illness, such as schizophrenia, nonetheless succeeded in having a tremendous influence on a crowd of followers.[14] Early on, the view was also expressed, that Hitler was able to handle his psychopathology skillfully, even aware of how he could use his symptoms to effectively steer the emotions of his audience.[15] Still other authors have suggested that Hitler's followers themselves were mentally disturbed;[16] evidence for this claim however was not produced.[17] The question how Hitler's individual psychopathology might have been linked with the enthusiasm of his followers was first discussed in 2000 by the interdisciplinary team of authors Matussek/Matussek/Marbach.[18]
Hysteria
Hitler in Pasewalk military hospital (1918)
It is not established whether Hitler was ever examined by a psychiatrist; Oswald Bumke, psychiatrist and contemporary of Hitler, assumed that this was never the case.[19] The only psychiatrist whom Hitler demonstrably met personally – the Munich Professor Kurt Schneider – was not Hitler's physician.[20] While medical documents that allow conclusions about Hitler's physical health have been found and made accessible for research (also see Adolf Hitler#Health), there is a lack of original documents that would allow for an assessment of Hitler’s mental condition.[21]
Speculations about a possible psychiatric evaluation of Hitler in his lifetime focus on his stay in a military hospital Pasewalk at the end of 1918. Hitler came to this hospital after mustard gas poisoning to which he was exposed during a battle in Flanders. In Mein Kampf, he mentions this hospital stay in connection with his painful temporary blindness, and with the "misfortune" and "madness" of the German Revolution of 1918–19 and of the German War defeat, both of which he learned about during his recovery, which triggered a renewed blindness. Hitler as well as his early biographers took great notice of this strong physical response to the historic events, because the relapse into blindness identified the turning point in which Hitler felt the vocation to become a politician and Germany's savior.[22]
Already in Hitler’s lifetime, some psychiatrists judged that such a relapse without organic explanation must be described as an hysterical symptom.[23] The hysteria diagnosis had its greatest popularity with Sigmund Freud's psychoanalysis, but was still in use in the 1930s and 1940s. Loss of the sense organs were among typical symptoms, in addition to self-centered and theatrical behavior. The psychiatrist Karl Wilmanns supposedly said in a lecture: "Hitler has had a hysterical reaction after being buried alive in the field"; Wilmanns then lost his position in 1933.[24] His assistant Hans Walter Gruhle suffered professional disadvantages due to similar statements.[25] In modern psychiatry, the term "hysteria" is no longer in use; today, corresponding symptoms are rather being associated with dissociative disorder or histrionic personality disorder.
Little is known about Hitler's hospital stay. It is not even certain what symptoms were presented. Hitler’s medical record from Pasewalk that could confirm or refute a diagnosis was already considered lost in the late 1920s.[6][26]
A Psychiatric Study of Hitler (1943)
During World War II, the United States intelligence agency OSS collected information about Hitler's personality and commissioned a research team led by Walter Charles Langer to develop psychological reports in 1943.[27] In one of these reports, titled A Psychiatric Study of Hitler, the hypothesis was developed that Hitler was treated in Pasewalk by the psychiatrist Edmund Forster, who had in 1933 committed suicide for fear of reprisals. The starting point of this report was the testimony of the psychiatrist Karl Kroner who also worked in the hospital in 1918. Kroner confirmed in particular that Forster had examined Hitler and that he had diagnosed him with "hysteria".[28] The report was held under lock and key, but in the early 1970s rediscovered by the American Hitler-biographer John Toland.[29]
I, the Eye Witness (1963)
In 1939, the Austrian physician and writer Ernst Weiss, who lived in France in exile, wrote a novel, Ich, der Augenzeuge (“I, the eye witness”), a fictional autobiography of a doctor who cured a “hysterical” soldier A. H. from Braunau who had lost his eyesight in the trenches. The plot is set in a Reichswehr hospital at the end of 1918. Since his knowledge could be dangerous to the Nazis, the (fictional) physician is placed in a concentration camp in 1933 and released only after he surrenders the medical records.
Ernst Weiss, the author, committed suicide after the entry of German troops in Paris. He was Jewish and had feared deportation. His novel was published in 1963. Weiss's knowledge of Hitler's hospital stay was believed to have come from the contemporary biographical literature.[30]
Speculation about hypnotherapy
Starting with the assumptions of the intelligence report and following Weiss’ novel, a series of researchers and authors have, consecutively, developed suspicions about a possible involvement of Forster in a supposedly securely established hypnotherapy.[6] These reconstructions are questionable not only because they don’t provide any new evidence; they also exclude alternative interpretations from the outset, widely disregard the historical context, and overlook even that Forster held a view of hysteria that would have led him to other methods of treatment than hypnosis.[31]
- Rudolph Binion, a historian at Brandeis University, considers the supposed hysteria diagnosis as a fallacy; in his 1976 book Hitler among the Germans, however, he picked up the secret service's suspicions and expanded them. Binion assumed that Weiss had met Forster in person and received from him a copy of the medical record on which his novel then was based. Following the novel, Binion then assumes that Forster subjected the blind, fanatical Hitler to a hypnotic suggestion treatment, and later, after being suspended from the civil service and in fear of persecution by the Gestapo, took his own life.[32] The only evidence for these assumptions is construed from Forster’s legacy, while there isn’t even proof of what sort of contact Forster had with Hitler.[26]
- In 1998, David E. Post, a forensic psychiatrist at Louisiana State University, published a paper in which the hypothesis that Forster had treated Hitler’s supposed hysteria with hypnosis was depicted as a proven fact. Post did not include any documented personal research.[33]
- Partially inspired by Binion, British neuropsychologist David Lewis published The Man Who Invented Hitler (2003). Lewis portrayed Forster’s hypnosis as fact and a reason for Hitler's transformation from an obedient soldier to a strong-willed, charismatic politician. In the book, Forster is called the "creator" of Hitler.[34]
- Another book that is inspired by Binion was published by Manfred Koch-Hillebrecht, a German psychologist and professor emeritus of politics at the University of Koblenz: Hitler. Ein Sohn des Krieges (2003). Koch-Hillebrecht tried to prove that Hitler suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and describes how Forster subjected his alleged patient to shock therapy in order to make him able to fight again in combat.[35]
- In Germany in 2004, lawyer Bernhard Horstmann published his book Hitler in Pasewalk, in which he describes how Forster had "healed" Hitler with a "brilliantly" used hypnosis not only from his hysterical blindness, but also endowed him with the feeling of omnipotence and the sense of mission that became so characteristic for Hitler as a politician. In this book, no other evidence is put forward as the story of Weiss' novel.[36]
- In 2006, Franziska Lamott, professor of forensic psychotherapy at the University of Ulm, wrote in an article: "[ ... ] as confirmed in the medical records of treatment of Corporal Adolf Hitler by the psychiatrist Prof. Edmund Forster, the latter freed him from hysterical blindness using hypnosis".[37]
Critical comments on these speculations appeared early on. But as psychiatric historian Jan Armbruster (University of Greifswald) judged, they were not sufficiently convincing, such as in the case of journalist Ottmar Katz, author of a biography of Hitler's personal physician, Theodor Morell (1982).[6] Katz suggested that Karl Kroner might have had personal reasons to report some untruths: living as a Jewish refugee in Reykjavik and forced to earn his life as a blue-collar worker, Kroner possibly hoped that the U.S. authorities would not only acknowledge him as a key witness but also help him to reestablish his medical practice.[38] A comprehensive plausibility test was finally performed by the Berlin psychiatrist and psychotherapist Peter Theiss-Abendroth in 2008.[39] In 2009, Armbruster carried this analysis forward, dismantled the hypotheses of Hitler’s hysteria diagnosis and hypnotherapy completely, and showed in detail how the story of Hitler’s alleged treatment by Forster became progressively elaborate and detailed between 1943 and 2006, not due to the evaluation of historical documents, but to continuous addition of narrative embellishments. Furthermore, Armbruster’s work offers the to date most comprehensive critique of the methodological weaknesses of many Hitler pathographies.[6]
Walter C. Langer (1943)
One of the few authors that stated Hitler showed signs of hysteria without using the Pasewalk episode and Hitler’s alleged treatment by Forster as main evidence, was the American psychoanalyst Walter C. Langer. Langer wrote his study in 1943 on behalf of the OSS.[40] He and his team conducted interviews with many people who were available to the American intelligence services and who knew Hitler personally. They came to the final judgment that Hitler was “a hysterical at the edge of schizophrenia”. The study was for a long time held under lock and key and published in 1972 under the title The Mind of Adolf Hitler.[41]
Schizophrenia
Already in his lifetime, many elements in Hitler's personal beliefs and conduct were classified by psychiatrists as signs of psychosis or schizophrenia: for example his faith that he was chosen by fate to liberate the German people from their supposedly most dangerous threat: the Jews.
W. H. D. Vernon (1942) and Henry Murray (1943)
One of the first who credited Hitler with the classic symptoms of schizophrenia was the Canadian psychiatrist W.H.D.Vernon; in 1942, he argued in an essay that Hitler was suffering from hallucinations, hearing voices, paranoia and megalomania. Vernon wrote that Hitler’s personality structure – although overall within the range of normal – should be described as leaning towards the paranoid type.[42]
One year later, Henry Murray, a psychologist at Harvard University, developed these views even further. Like Walter C. Langer, Murray wrote his report, Analysis of the Personality of Adolph Hitler, on behalf of the OSS. He came to the conclusion that Hitler, next to hysterical signs, showed all the classic symptoms of schizophrenia: hypersensitivity, panic attacks, irrational jealousy, paranoia, omnipotence fantasies, delusions of grandeur, belief in a messianic mission, and extreme paranoia. He considered him as borderlining between hysteria and schizophrenia, but stressed that Hitler possessed considerable control over his pathological tendencies and that he deliberately utilized them in order to stir up nationalist sentiments among the Germans and their hatred against alleged persecutors. Like Walter C. Langer, Murray thought it likely that Hitler eventually would lose faith in himself and in his "destiny", and then commit suicide.[43]
Wolfgang Treher (1966)
The attempt to prove that Hitler had a fully developed psychosis in a clinical sense has only occasionally been made. An example is the book Hitler, Steiner, Schreber (1966) by the Freiburg psychiatrist Wolfgang Treher. Treher explains that both Rudolf Steiner (whose anthroposophy he attributes to mental illness) and Hitler suffered from schizophrenia.[44] He writes that both managed to stay in touch with reality because they had the opportunity to create their own organizations (Steiner: the Anthroposophical Society; Hitler: the NSDAP and its many subdivisions) that they could influence according to their delusions – and therefore avoid the, normally expected, “schizophrenic withdrawal”. Treher finds that Hitler’s megalomania and paranoia are quite striking.[45]
Edleff Schwaab (1992)
In 1992, German-American clinical psychologist Edleff H. Schwaab published his psychobiography Hitler’s Mind in which he states that Hitler’s imagination – particularly his obsession with the supposed threat posed by the Jews – must be described as the outcome of a paranoia. The cause for this disorder Schwaab suspects to be rooted in a traumatic childhood that was overshadowed by a depressive mother and a tyrannical father.[46]
Paul Matussek, Peter Matussek, Jan Marbach (2000)
The book Hitler – Karriere eines Wahns (2000) is the result from a joint effort of the psychiatrist Paul Matussek, the media theorist Peter Matussek, and the sociologist Jan Marbach, to overcome the tradition of one-dimensional psychiatric pathography and to seek an interdisciplinary approach instead, taking into account socio-historical dimensions, too. This investigation is focused not so much on Hitler's personal psychopathology, but rather on a description of the interaction between individual and collective factors that accounted for the overall dynamics of the Hitler madness. The book specifies the interplay between Hitler’s leader role (which was charged with psychotic symptoms) on the one hand, and the fascination that this role invoked in his followers on the other hand. The authors conclude that the Nazi crimes had indeed been an expression of madness, but of a madness which was so strongly accepted by the public that the psychotic Hitler and his followers were factually stabilizing each other in their "mad" worldview.[18]
Frederic L. Coolidge, Felicia L. Davis, Daniel L. Segal (2007)
In terms of methodology, the most elaborate psychological assessment of Hitler was undertaken in 2007 by a research team at the University of Colorado. This study differed from all earlier works by its open, exploratory approach. The team tested systematically which mental disorders Hitler's behavior may and may not have been indicating. It was the first Hitler pathography that was consistently empirical. The psychologists and historians reviewed passed down reports by people who knew Hitler personally, and evaluated these accounts in accordance with a self-developed diagnostic tool that allowed for a wide range of personality, clinical, and neuropsychological disturbances to be measured.[47] According to this study, Hitler showed obvious traits of paranoia, but also of anti-social, sadistic, and narcissistic personality disorders, and distinct traits of posttraumatic stress disorder.[14]
Organically caused psychotic symptoms
Hitler’s alleged psychotic symptoms have repeatedly been attributed to possible organic causes. The psychiatrist Günter Hermann Hesse for example was convinced that Hitler suffered from long-term consequences of the poisoning injury suffered during World War I.[48]
Syphilis
In the late 1980s, Ellen Gibbels (University of Cologne) had attributed the limb trembling in Hitler’s late years to Parkinson's disease, a widely held consensus in the research community. However, some researchers interpreted Hitler’s tremor as a symptom of advanced syphilis, most recently the American historian Deborah Hayden. Hayden links the general paresis from which Hitler in her opinion suffered since 1942, to the mental decline in the last years of his life, especially to his "paranoid temper tantrums."[49] The physician Frederick Redlich however reported that there is no evidence that suggests that Hitler had syphilis.
Parkinson 's disease
The possibility that Hitler suffered from Parkinson's disease was first investigated by Ernst-Günther Schenck[50] and later by Ellen Gibbels.[51] In 1994, Gibbels published a paper that pursued the question if Hitler’s nerve disease could also have impaired him mentally.[52]
Psychopathy / antisocial personality disorder
Given the inhumanity of his crimes, Hitler was early on linked with “psychopathy”, a severe personality disorder whose main symptoms are a great or complete lack of empathy, social responsibility and conscience. The biologically determined concept still plays a role in the psychiatric forensic science, but it is no longer found in the modern medical classification systems (DSM-IV and ICD-10). Today, corresponding clinical pictures are mostly classified as signs of an antisocial personality disorder. However, the symptomatology is rare, and unlike in popular discourse – where the classification of Hitler as a “psychopath” is commonplace[53] –, psychiatrists have only occasionally endeavored to associate him with psychopathy or antisocial personality disorder.
Gustav Bychowski (1948)
Early on, some Hitler pathographies took not only psychological, but also historical and sociological aspects into account. This interdisciplinary approach had been developed by the psychiatrist Wilhelm Lange-Eichbaum back in 1928.[54] The earliest socio-psychological pathography of Hitler appeared in 1948 in Gustav Bychowski anthology Dictators and Disciples.[55] In this volume, Bychowski, a Polish-American psychiatrist, compared several historical figures who have successfully carried out a coup d’etat: Julius Caesar, Oliver Cromwell, Robespierre, Hitler and Josef Stalin. He came to the conclusion that all of these men had an abundance of traits that must by classified as “psychopathic” such as the tendency to act out impulses or to project their own hostile impulses onto other people or groups.[56]
Desmond Henry, Dick Geary, Peter Tyrer (1993)
In 1993, the interdisciplinary team Desmond Henry, Dick Geary and Peter Tyrer published an essay in which they expressed their common view that Hitler had suffered from antisocial personality disorder as defined in ICD-10. Tyrer, a psychiatrist, was convinced that Hitler furthermore showed signs of paranoia and of histrionic personality disorder.[57]
Depth psychological approaches
While psychiatrically oriented authors, when dealing with Hitler, were primarily endeavoring to diagnose him with a specific clinical disorder, some of their colleagues who follow a depth psychological doctrine as the psychoanalytic school of Sigmund Freud, were first and foremost interested in explaining his monstrously destructive behavior. In accordance to these doctrines, they assumed that Hitler’s behavior and the development of his character were propelled by unconscious processes that were rooted in his earliest years. Pathographies that are inspired by depth psychology, typically attempt to reconstruct the scenario of Hitler's childhood and youth. Occasionally, authors such as Gerhard Vinnai started out with a depth psychological analysis, but then advanced far beyond the initial approach.
Erich Fromm (1973)
Among the most famous Hitler pathographies is Erich Fromm’s 1973 published book Anatomy of Human Destructiveness. Fromm’s goal was to determine the causes of human violence. He took his knowledge of the person of Hitler from several sources such as the memoir of Hitler’s boyhood friend August Kubizek (1953), Werner Maser’s Hitler-biography (1971), and, most important, a paper by Bradley F. Smith about Hitler's childhood and youth (1967).[58]
Fromm’s pathography follows largely Sigmund Freud's concept of psychoanalysis and states that Hitler was an immature, self-centered dreamer who did not overcome his childish narcissism; as a result of his lack of adaptation to reality he was exposed to humiliations which he tried do overcome by means of lust-ridden destructiveness ("necrophilia"). The evidence of this desire to destroy – including the so-called Nero Decree – was so outrageous that one must assume that Hitler had not only acted destructively, but was driven by a “destructive character”.[59]
Helm Stierlin (1975)
In 1975, the German psychoanalyst and family therapist Helm Stierlin published his book Adolf Hitler. Familienperspektiven, in which he raised the question of the psychological and motivational bases for Hitler's aggression and passion for destruction, similarly to Fromm. His study focuses heavily on Hitler’s relationship to his mother, Klara. Stierlin felt that Hitler's mother had frustrated hopes for herself that she strongly delegated to her son, even though for him, too, they were impossible to satisfy.[60]
Alice Miller (1980)
The Swiss childhood researcher Alice Miller gave Hitler a section in her 1980 published book For Your Own Good. Miller owed her knowledge about Hitler to biographic and pathographic works such as those by Rudolf Olden (1935), Konrad Heiden (1936/37), Franz Jetzinger (1958), Joachim Fest (1973), Helm Stierlin (1975), and John Toland (1976). She wrote that the family setting in which Hitler grew up was not only dominated by an authoritarian and often brutal father, Alois Hitler, but could be characterized as "prototype of a totalitarian regime". She wrote that Hitler’s hate-ridden and destructive personality, that later made millions of people suffer, emerged under the humiliating and degrading treatment and the beating that he received from his father as a child. Miller believes that the mother, whose first three children died at an early age, was barely capable of fostering a warm relationship to her son. She posits that Hitler early on identified with his tyrannical father, and later transferred the trauma of his parental home onto Germany; his contemporaries followed him willingly because they had experienced a childhood that was very similar.
Miller also pointed out that Johanna Pölzl, the querulent sister of Klara Hitler who lived with the family throughout Hitler's entire childhood, possibly suffered from a mental disorder. According to witnesses, Pölzl, who died in 1911, was either schizophrenic or mentally handicapped.[61]
Norbert Bromberg, Verna Volz Small (1983)
Another Hitler pathography was submitted in 1983 by the New York psychoanalyst Norbert Bromberg (Albert Einstein College of Medicine) and the writer Verna Volz Small.[62] In this book, Hitler's Psychopathology, Bromberg and Small argue that many of Hitler's personal self-manifestations and actions were to be regarded as an expression of a serious personality disorder. On examination of his family background, his childhood and youth and of his behavior as an adult, as a politician and ruler, they found many clues that Hitler was in line both with the symptoms of a narcissistic personality disorder and of a borderline personality disorder (see also below). Bromberg and Small’s work has been criticized for the unreliable sources that it is based on, and for its speculative treatment of Hitler’s presumed homosexuality.[63] (See also: Sexuality of Adolf Hitler, The Pink Swastika.)
The opinion that Hitler had narcissistic personality disorder was not new; Alfred Sleigh had already represented it in 1966.[64]
Béla Grunberger, Pierre Dessuant (1997)
The French psychoanalyst Béla Grunberger and Pierre Dessuant have included a section about Hitler into their 1997 book Narcissisme, christianisme, antisémitisme. Like Fromm, Bromberg and Small, they were particularly interested in Hitler's narcissism, which they tried to trace by a detailed interpretation of Hitler's alleged sexual practices and constipation problems.[65]
George Victor (1999)
The psychotherapist George Victor had special interest in Hitler’s antisemitism. In his 1999 book Hitler: The Pathology of Evil Hitler, he assumed that Hitler was not only obsessed with hatred of Jews, but with self-hatred, too, and that he suffered from serious (borderline) personality disorder. Victor found that all these problems had their origin in the abuse that he experienced as a child by his father – who, as he believed, was of Jewish descent.[66] (See also Alois Hitler#Biological father.)
Posttraumatic stress disorder
Although it is generally undisputed that Hitler had formative experiences as a frontline soldier in World War I, only in the early 2000s did psychologists come up with the consideration that at least some of his psychopathology may be attributed to war trauma.
Theodore Dorpat (2003)
In 2003, Theodore Dorpat, a resident psychiatrist in Seattle, published his book Wounded Monster in which he credited Hitler with complex post-traumatic stress disorder. He assumed that Hitler not only experienced war trauma, but – due to physical and mental abuse by the father and the parental failure of the depressed mother – chronic childhood trauma, too. Dorpat is convinced that Hitler showed signs of this disturbance at the age of 11. According to Dorpat, many of Hitler’s personality traits – such as his volatility, his malice, the sadomasochistic nature of his relationships, his human indifference and his avoidance of shame – can be traced back to trauma.[67]
In the same year, the above-mentioned German psychologist Manfred Koch-Hillebrecht had come forward with the assumption that Hitler had posttraumatic stress disorder from his war experiences.
Gerhard Vinnai (2004)
In the subsequent year, the social psychologist Gerhard Vinnai (University of Bremen), came to similar conclusions. When writing his work Hitler – Scheitern und Vernichtungswut (2004; “Hitler – Failing and rage of destruction”), Vinnai had a psychoanalytic point of depart; he first subjected Hitler’s book Mein Kampf a depth psychological interpretation and tried to reconstruct how Hitler had processed his experiences in World War I against the background of his childhood and youth. But similar to Dorpat, Vinnai explains the destructive potential in Hitler's psyche not so much as a result of early childhood experiences, but rather due to trauma that Hitler had suffered as a soldier in World War I. Not only Hitler, but a substantial part of the German population was affected by such war trauma. Vinnai then leaves the psychoanalytical discourse and comments on social psychological questions, such as how Hitler’s political world view could have emerged from his trauma and how this could appeal to large numbers of people.[68]
In 2007, the above mentionened authors Coolidge, Davis, and Segal, too, assumed that Hitler suffered from posttraumatic stress disorder.
Psychoactive drug use
Hitler regularly consumed methamphetamine, barbiturates, amphetamine, opiates and cocaine.[69][70] In 2015, Norman Ohler published a work Der totale Rausch ("The Total Rush") in which he claims that all of Hitler’s irrational behavior can be attributed to his excessive drug use. Helena Barop, who reviewed the book in Die Zeit, wrote that Ohler’s account is not based on solid research.[71]
Minority opinions
Hypotheses like the ones that Hitler's personality and behavior pointed to a personality disorder, to a posttraumatic stress disorder or to schizophrenia have not been undisputed, but they have repeatedly found endorsement from fellow psychiatrists. This does not apply to the following Hitler-pathographies whose authors are largely left alone with their diagnoses.
Abnormal brain lateralization: Colin Martindale, Nancy Hasenfus, Dwight Hines (1976)
In a 1976 published essay, the psychiatrists Colin Martindale, Nancy Hasenfus, and Dwight Hines (University of Maine) suggested that Hitler had suffered from a sub-function of the left hemisphere of the brain. They referred to the tremor of his left limbs, his tendency for leftward eye movements and the alleged missing of the left testicle. They believed that Hitler’s behavior was dominated by his right cerebral hemisphere, a situation that resulted in symptoms such as a tendency to the irrational, auditory hallucinations, and uncontrolled outbursts. Martindale, Hasenfus and Hines even suspected that the dominance of the right hemisphere contributed to the two basic elements of Hitlers political ideology: antisemitism and Lebensraum ideology.[72]
Schizotypal personality disorder: Robert G. L. Waite (1977)
Robert G. L. Waite, a psychohistorian at Williams College, has been working towards an interdisciplinary exploration of Nazism since 1949, combining historiographical and psychoanalytic methods. In 1977, he published his study The Psychopathic God in which he took the view that Hitler's career can not be understood without considering his pathological personality. Waite assumed that Hitler suffered from schizotypal personality disorder, a condition that at that time was referred to as “borderline personality disorder”. The term received its present meaning only at the end of the 1970s. Until then, “borderline personality disorder” referred to a disorder in the border area of neurosis and schizophrenia, for which Gregory Zilboorg had also coined the term "ambulatory schizophrenia".[73] As cues that Hitler had this condition, Waite specified Hitler’s Oedipus complex, his infantile phantasy, his volatile inconsistency and his alleged coprophilia and urolagnia.[74] Waite’s view partially corresponds with that of the Vienna psychiatrist and Buchenwald survivor Ernest A. Rappaport, who already in 1975 hat called Hitler an "ambulatory schizophrenic".[75]
Dangerous Leader Disorder: John D. Mayer (1993)
The personality psychologist John D. Mayer (University of New Hampshire) published an essay in 1993 in which he suggested an independent psychiatric category for destructive personalities like Hitler: A dangerous leader disorder (DLD). Mayer identified three groups of symptomatic behavioral singularities: 1. indifference (becoming manifest for example in murder of opponents, family members or citizens, or in genocide); 2. intolerance (practicing press censorship, running a secret police or condoning torture); 3. self-aggrandizement (self-assessment as a "unifier" of a people, overestimation of own military power, identification with religion or nationalism or proclamation of a "grand plan"). Mayer compared Hitler to Stalin and Saddam Hussein; the stated aim of this proposition of a psychiatric categorization was to provide the international community with a diagnostic instrument which would make it easier to recognize dangerous leader personalities in mutual consensus and to take action against them.[76] (See also Toxic leader.)
Bipolar disorder: Jablow Hershman, Julian Lieb (1994)
In 1994, the writer Jablow Hershman and the psychiatrist Julian Lieb published their joint book A Brotherhood of Tyrants. Based on known Hitler biographies, they developed the hypothesis that Hitler – just like Napoleon Bonaparte and Stalin - had bipolar disorder, which drove him to enter politics and become a dictator.[77]
Asperger syndrome: Michael Fitzgerald (2004)
Michael Fitzgerald, a professor of child and adolescent psychiatry, published a cornucopia of pathographies of outstanding historical personalities, mostly disclosing that they had Asperger syndrome, which is on the autism spectrum. In his 2004 published anthology Autism and creativity, he classified Hitler as an "autistic psychopath". Autistic psychopathy is a term that the Austrian physician Hans Asperger had coined in 1944 in order to label the clinical picture that was later named after him: Asperger syndrome, which has nothing to do with psychopathy in the sense of an antisocial personality disorder. Fitzgerald appraised many of Hitler’s publicly known traits as autistic, particularly his various obsessions, his lifeless gaze, his social awkwardness, his lack of personal friendships, and his tendency toward monologue-like speeches, which, according to Fitzgerald, resulted from an inability to have real conversations.[78]
Critique
Pathographies are by definition works on personalities which the author believes to be mentally disturbed. Psychiatrists deal with mental illness and usually write no specialist publications on those they consider to be mentally healthy. Exceptions occur at most within professional discourses in which individual authors confront the positions of colleagues, who, in the opinion of the former, are at fault to classify a certain personality as mentally ill. As a result, works that advance the view that a particular personality was mentally healthy, are naturally underrepresented in the overall corpus of pathographic literature. This applies to the psychopathography of Adolf Hitler, too.
Some authors have described Hitler as a cynical manipulator or a fanatic, but denied that he was seriously mentally disturbed; among them are the British historians Ian Kershaw, Hugh Trevor-Roper, Alan Bullock, and A. J. P. Taylor, and, more recently, the German psychiatrist Manfred Lütz.[79] Ian Kershaw has concluded that Hitler had no major psychotic disorders and was not clinically insane.[80] The American psychologist Glenn D. Walters wrote in 2000: "Much of the debate about Hitler's long-term mental health is probably questionable, because even if he had suffered from significant psychiatric problems, he attained the supreme power in Germany rather in spite of these difficulties than through them."[81]
Erik H. Erikson (1950)
The psychoanalyst and developmental psychologist Erik Erikson has given Adolf Hitler a chapter in his 1950 book, Childhood and Society. Erikson referred to Hitler as an "histrionic and hysterical adventurer" and discovered evidence of an undissolved Oedipus complex in his self-portrayals. Nonetheless, he pointed out that Hitler was such an actor that his self-expression could not be measured with conventional diagnostic tools. Although Hitler had possibly been showing certain psychopathology, he dealt with this in an extremely controlled fashion and utilized it purposefully.[82]
Terry L. Brink (1974)
Terry Brink, a student of Alfred Adler, published an essay The case of Hitler (1975) in which he, similar to the above-mentioned authors, concluded that after a conscientious evaluation of all records there is not sufficient evidence that Hitler had a mental disorder. Many of Hitler's behavior must be understood as attempts to overcome a difficult childhood. However, many of the documents and statements that have been quoted in order to proof a mental illness were to be considered untrustworthy. Too strong consideration has been given, for example, to allied propaganda and to fabrications of people who have tried to distance themselves from Hitler for personal reasons.[83]
Frederick Redlich (1998)
One of the most comprehensive Hitler pathographies comes from the neurologist and psychiatrist Frederick Redlich.[84] Redlich, who emigrated from Austria in 1938 to the United States, is considered one of the founders of American social psychiatry. In his 1998 published work Hitler: Diagnosis of a Destructive Prophet, on which he worked for 13 years, Redlich came to believe that Hitler had indeed shown enough paranoia and defense mechanisms in order to ”fill a psychiatric textbook with it”, but that he was probably not mentally disturbed. Hitler’s paranoid delusions ”could be seen as symptoms of a mental disorder, but the largest part of the personality worked normal.” Hitler ”knew what he was doing and he did it with pride and enthusiasm.”[85]
Hans-Joachim Neumann, Henrik Eberle (2009)
After two years of study – of the diaries of Theodor Morell among others –, the physician Hans-Joachim Neumann and the historian Henrik Eberle published in 2009 their joint book War Hitler krank? (“Was Hitler sick?”), in which they concluded: ”For a medically objectified mental illness of Hitler there is no evidence”.[86]
Publications
Summaries
- Armbruster, Jan. Die Behandlung Adolf Hitlers im Lazarett Pasewalk 1918: Historische Mythenbildung durch einseitige bzw. spekulative Pathographie (PDF; 776 kB). In: Journal für Neurologie, Neurochirurgie und Psychiatrie 10, 2009, Issue 4, P. 18–22.
- Brunner, José. Humanizing Hitler – Psychohistory and the Making of a Monster. In: Moshe Zuckermann (editor): Geschichte und Psychoanalyse, Tel Aviver Jahrbuch für Geschichte XXXII., Göttingen 2004, P. 148–172.
- Gatzke, Hans W. Hitler and Psychohistory. In: American Historical Review 78, 1973, P. 394 ff.
- Kornbichler, Thomas. Adolf-Hitler-Psychogramme, Frankfurt am Main, 1994. ISBN 3-631-47063-0.
- Rosenbaum, Ron Explaining Hitler: The Search for the Origins of His Evil, Harper Perennial: New York, 1999. ISBN 0-06-095339-X
Pasewalk episode
- Köpf, Gerhard: Hitlers psychogene Erblindung. Geschichte einer Krankenakte. In: Nervenheilkunde, 2005, Volume 24, P. 783–790
Further psychopathographies and psychobiographies of Hitler not mentioned in this article
- Carlotti, Anna Lisa Adolf Hitler. Analisi storica della psicobiografie del dittatore, Milano, 1984.
- Dobberstein, Marcel. Hitler: Die Anatomie einer destruktiven Seele, Münster 2012.
- Doucet, Friedrich W. Im Banne des Mythos: Die Psychologie des Dritten Reiches, Bechtle: Esslingen, 1979. ISBN 3762803897
- Koch-Hillebrecht, Manfred. Homo Hitler. Psychogramm des deutschen Diktators. Goldmann: München 1999. ISBN 3-442-75603-0.
- Neumayr, Anton. Hitler: Wahnideen – Krankheiten – Perversionen, Pichler: Wien 2001. ISBN 3854312504
- Recktenwald, Johann. Woran hat Adolf Hitler gelitten? Eine neuropsychiatrische Deutung, München, 1963.
References
- ^ Hilken, Susanne. Wege und Probleme der Psychiatrischen Pathographie, Karin Fischer: Aachen, 1993
- ^ Peter Carey: The Psychiatric Question: Is It Fair to Analyze Donald Trump From Afar?, The New York Times, August 15, 2016.
- ^ Bürger-Prinz, Hans. Ein Psychiater berichtet, Hoffmann & Campe, 1971. ISBN 3-455-00740-6
- ^ Wippermann, Wolfgang. Faschismus und Psychoanalyse. Forschungsstand und Forschungsperspektiven. In: Bedrich Loewenstein (Editor). Geschichte und Psychologie. Annäherungsversuche, Pfaffenweiler, 1992. P. 266; Dörr, Nikolas. Zeitgeschichte, Psychologie und Psychoanalyse
- ^ Machtan, Lothar. Hitlers Geheimnis: Das Doppelleben eines Diktators, Fest: Berlin, 2001. ISBN 3828601456; Lothar Machtan: Hitlers Geheimnis perlentaucher.de
- ^ a b c d e Armbruster, Jan: Die Behandlung Adolf Hitlers im Lazarett Pasewalk 1918: Historische Mythenbildung durch einseitige bzw. spekulative Pathographie . In: Journal für Neurologie, Neurochirurgie und Psychiatrie, Volume 10 (4), 2009, P. 18–22.
- ^ Als ein Volk ohne Schatten! In: Die Zeit, No. 48, November 21, 1986
- ^ Arendt, Hannah. Eichmann in Jerusalem. Ein Bericht von der Banalität des Bösen, Piper: München, Zürich, 15th edition, 2006. ISBN 978-3-492-24822-8; to similar conclusions came Harald Welzer in his book Täter. Wie aus ganz normalen Menschen Massenmörder werden, Fischer: Frankfurt, 2005. ISBN 3-10-089431-6; other authors however, as Rolf Pohl and Joachim Perels, are convinced that mass murderers cannot possibly be mentally normal.
- ^ Peter Longerich: Hitler. Biographie. Siedler, Munich 2015, ISBN 978-3-8275-0060-1
- ^ The Jewish theologian and Holocaust survivor Emil Fackenheim, among others, believed that a radical evil such as the evil in Hitler, could not be explained by humans, but only by God, and God kept silent; Emil Fackenheim, Yehuda Bauer: The Temptation to Blame God. In: Rosenbaum, Ron. Explaining Hitler: The Search for the Origins of His Evil. Harper Perennial: New York, 1999. ISBN 0-06-095339-X
- ^ Claude Lanzmann and the War Against the Question Why. In: Rosenbaum (1999), P. 251–266; Lanzmann, Claude. Hier ist kein Warum. In: Stuart Liebman (Editor). Claude Lanzmann’s Shoah: Key Essays, Oxford University Press, 2007. ISBN 0-19-518864-0; Lanzmann, Claude; Caruth, Cathy; Rodowick, David. The Obscenity of Understanding. An Evening with Claude Lanzmann. In: American Imago, 48, 1991, P. 473–495
- ^ Jan Ehrenwald. The ESP Experience: A Psychiatric Validation. Basic Books, 1978. ISBN 0-465-02056-9, Section Hitler: Shaman, Schizophrenic, Medium?
- ^ Goldhagen, Daniel. Hitler's Willing Executioners. Alfred Knopf: New York, 1996; Hans-Ulrich Wehler shared the same view: Geschichte als historische Sozialwissenschaft. Frankfurt am Main, 1973, P. 103.
- ^ a b Coolidge, Frederic L.; Davis, Felicia L.; Segal, Daniel L.. Understanding Madmen: A SSM-IV Assessment of Adolf Hitler . In: Individual Differences Research 5, 2007, P. 30–43.
- ^ For example: Murray, Henry A. Analysis of the personality of Adolf Hitler. With predictions of his future behavior and suggestions for dealing with him now and after Germany’s surrender, 1943. Online:„Analysis of the Personality of Adolph Hitler“
- ^ For example Langer: Walter Langer is dead at 82; wrote secret study of Hitler New York Times; A Psychological Profile of Adolf Hitler. His Life and Legend (Online); Eckhardt, William. The Values of Fascism. In: Journal of Social Issues, Volume 24, 1968, P. 89–104; Muslin, Hyman. Adolf Hitler. The Evil Self. In: Psychohistory Review, 20, 1992, P. 251–270; Berke, Joseph. The Wellsprings of Fascism: Individual Malice, Group Hatreds and the Emergence of National Narcissism, Free Associations, Vol. 6, Part 3 (Number 39), 1996; Lothane, Zvi. Omnipotence, or the delusional aspect of ideology, in relation to love, power, and group dynamics. In: American Journal of Psychoanalysis, 1997, Volume 57 (1), P. 25–46
- ^ Psychological evaluations of Nazi leaders didn’t show any signs of mental disturbances (Zillmer, Eric A.; Harrower, Molly; Ritzler, Barry A.; Archer, Robert P. The Quest for the Nazi Personality. A Psychological Investigation of Nazi War criminals. Routledge, 1995. ISBN 0-8058-1898-7)
- ^ a b Matussek, Paul; Matussek, Peter; Marbach, Jan . Hitler – Karriere eines Wahns, Herbig: Munich, 2000. ISBN 3-7766-2184-2; Das Phänomen Hitler; Review; Marbach, Jan. Zum Verhältnis von individueller Schuld und kollektiver Verantwortung. Lecture given on the 35th annual conference of the „Deutschsprachige Gesellschaft für Kunst und Psychopathologie des Ausdrucks e.V.“, October 25. – 28., 2003, Munich
- ^ Bumke, Oswald. Erinnerungen und Betrachtungen. Der Weg eines deutschen Psychiaters, Richard Pflaum: München, 2nd edition, 1953.
- ^ Schneider briefly made Hitler’s acquaintance when the latter visited an old and at this time mentally deranged party comrade from the early days of his political activity at the Schwabing Hospital. Public Mental Health Practices in Germany; Schenck, Ernst Günther. Patient Hitler. Eine medizinische Biographie, Droste: Düsseldorf, 1989. ISBN 3-8289-0377-0, P. 514.
- ^ Armbruster (2009); Redlich, Fritz. Hitler. Diagnose des destruktiven Propheten, Werner Eichbauer: Vienna, 2002. ISBN 0-19-505782-1; Schenck, Ernst Günther. Patient Hitler. Eine medizinische Biographie, Verlag Droste, 1989.
- ^ Hitler, Adolf. Mein Kampf, 13th edition, 1933, P. 220–225.
- ^ Oswald Bumke. Erinnerungen und Betrachtungen. Der Weg eines deutschen Psychiaters. München: Richard Pflaum. 2nd edition 1953; see also Murray (1943)
- ^ Pieper, Werner. Highdelberg: Zur Kulturgeschichte der Genussmittel und psychoaktiven Drogen, 2000, P. 228; Lidz, R.; Wiedemann, H. R. Karl Wilmanns (1873–1945). … einige Ergänzungen und Richtigstellungen. In: Fortschritte der Neurologie, 1989, Volume 57, P. 160–161
- ^ Riedesser, P.; Verderber, A. „Maschinengewehre hinter der Front“. Zur Geschichte der deutschen Militärpsychiatrie, Fischer: Frankfurt/Main, 1996. ISBN 3-935964-52-8
- ^ a b Armbruster, Jan. Edmund Robert Forster (1878–1933). Lebensweg und Werk eines deutschen Neuropsychiaters, Matthiesen: Husum, 2006. ISBN 978-3-7868-4102-9
- ^ Hoffman, Louise E. American psychologists and wartime research on Germany, 1941–1945. In: American Psychologist, Volume 47, 1992, P. 264–273
- ^ Armbruster (2009); Dr. Karl Kroner
- ^ Toland, John. Adolf Hitler: The Definitive Biography, 1976. ISBN 0-385-42053-6
- ^ Ernst Weiß: Der Augenzeuge. Biographie und biographische Darstellungstechnik
- ^ Forster, Edmund. Hysterische Reaktion und Simulation. In: Monatsschrift für Psychiatrie und Neurologie, Volume 42, 1917, P. 298–324, 370–381; Armbruster (2009)
- ^ Binion, Rudolph. Hitler among the Germans, Elsevier: New York, 1976. ISBN 0-444-99033-X.
- ^ Post, David E. The Hypnosis of Adolf Hitler. In: Journal of Forensic Science, November 1998, Volume 43 (6), P. 1127–1132; Armbruster (2009)
- ^ Lewis, David. The man who invented Hitler. The Making of the Führer, London, 2003. ISBN 0-7553-1149-3; Armbruster (2009)
- ^ Koch-Hillebrecht, Manfred. Hitler. Ein Sohn des Krieges. Fronterlebnis und Weltbild, Herbig: Munich, 2003. ISBN 3-7766-2357-8; Hitlers Therapie Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung; Armbruster (2009)
- ^ Horstmann, Bernhard. Hitler in Pasewalk. Die Hypnose und ihre Folgen, Droste: Düsseldorf, 2004. ISBN 3-7700-1167-8; Der blinde Führer. Bernd Horstmanns Krimi um Hitlers Krankenakte; Review in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung; Armbruster (2009)
- ^ Franziska Lamott. Trauma ohne Unbewusstes? – Anmerkung zur Inflation eines Begriffs. In: Buchholz, M. B.; Gödde, G. (editors). Das Unbewusste in der Praxis. Erfahrungen verschiedener Professionen, Volume 3, Psychosozial-Verlag: Gießen, 2006. ISBN 3-89806-449-2, P. 587–609; cited after: Armbruster (2009)
- ^ Katz, Ottmar. Prof. Dr. Med. Theo Morell. Hitlers Leibarzt., Hestia-Verlag: Bayreuth, 1982. ISBN 3-7770-0244-5
- ^ Theiss-Abendroth, Peter. Was wissen wir wirklich über die militärpsychiatrische Behandlung des Gefreiten Adolf Hitler? Eine literarisch-historische Untersuchung. In: Psychiatrische Praxis, Volume 35, 2008, P. 1–5
- ^ Walter Langer is dead at 82; wrote secret study of Hitler New York Times
- ^ Langer, Walter C. The Mind of Adolf Hitler. The Secret Wartime Report, Basis Books, 1972. ISBN 0-465-04620-7
- ^ Vernon, W. H. D. Hitler, the man – notes for a case history (PDF-Datei; 2,79 MB). In: The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, Volume 37, Issue 3, July 1942, P. 295–308; compare Medicus: A Psychiatrist Looks at Hitler. In: The New Republic, April 26th, 1939, P. 326–327.
- ^ Murray, Henry A. Analysis of the personality of Adolf Hitler. With predictions of his future behavior and suggestions for dealing with him now and after Germany’s surrender, 1943. Online:Analysis of the Personality of Adolph Hitler
- ^ Treher, Wolfgang. Hitler, Steiner, Schreber – Gäste aus einer anderen Welt. Die seelischen Strukturen des schizophrenen Prophetenwahns, Oknos: Emmendingen, 1966 (newer edition: Oknos, 1990). ISBN 3-921031-00-1; Wolfgang Treher; Is Wolfgang Treher a reliable author?
- ^ Treher heavily focuses on such statements of Hitler that from the point of “psychological normality” are completely incomprehensible, as for example: “Our dead have all become alive again. They march with us, not in spirit, but alive.” (Treher, P. 157f)
- ^ Schwaab, Edleff H. Hitler’s Mind. A Plunge into Madness, Praeger: Westport, CT, 1992. ISBN 0-275-94132-9
- ^ Coolidge Assessment Battery Manual (doc; 208 kB)
- ^ Hesse, Günter. Hitlers neuropsychiatrischen Störungen. Folgen seiner Lost-Vergiftung?
- ^ Deborah Hayden. Pox. Genius, Madness, and the Mysteries of Syphilis. Basic Books. 2003. ISBN 0-465-02881-0; Hitler syphilis theory revived; Heinrich Himmler’s physician, Felix Kersten, allegedly had access to a medical report that was held under lock and key and supposedly proved that Hitler had syphilis. (Kessel, Joseph. The Man With the Miraculous Hands: The Fantastic Story of Felix Kersten, Himmler’s Private Doctor, Burford Books: Springfield, NJ, 2004. ISBN 1-58080-122-6; see also Hitler the Paretic (Syphilitic)
- ^ Ernst Günther Schenck. Patient Hitler. Eine medizinische Biographie. Verlag Droste. 1989
- ^ Gibbels, Ellen. Hitlers Parkinson-Krankheit: zur Frage eines hirnorganischen Psychosyndroms, Springer: New York, Berlin, 1990. ISBN 3-540-52399-5; to the English speaking world, this hypothesis found admission through Tom Hutton, in 1999 (Hitler’s defeat after Allied invasion attributed to Parkinson’s disease)
- ^ Gibbels, Ellen. Hitlers Nervenkrankheit: Eine neurologisch- psychiatrische Studie. (PDF; 6,87 MB) In: Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte, 1994, Volume 42 (2), P. 155–220
- ^ War Hitler krank?
- ^ Lange-Eichbaum, Wilhelm. Genie – Irrsinn und Ruhm, Ernst Reinhardt: Munich, 1928
- ^ Gustav Bychowski, M.D. – 1895-1972
- ^ Bychowski, Gustav. Dictators and Disciples. From Caesar to Stalin: a psychoanalytic interpretation of History, International Universities Press: New York, 1948
- ^ Henry, Desmond; Geary, Dick; Tyrer, Peter. Adolf Hitler. A Reassessment of His Personality Status. In: Irish Journal of Psychological Medicine, Volume 10, 1993, P. 148–151
- ^ Smith, Bradley F.. Adolf Hitler. His Family, Childhood and Youth, Stanford, 1967. ISBN 0-8179-1622-9.
- ^ Fromm, Erich. The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness, 1973. ISBN 978-0-8050-1604-8
- ^ Stierlin, Helm. Adolf Hitler. Familienperspektiven, Suhrkamp, 1975
- ^ Zdral, Wolfgang. Die Hitlers: Die unbekannte Familie des Führers, 2005, P. 32
- ^ Bromberg, Norbert; Small, Verna Volz. Hitler’s Psychopathology, International Universities Press: New York, Madison/CT, 1983. ISBN 0-8236-2345-9; see also Bromberg, Norbert. Hitler’s Character and Its Development. In: American Imago, 28, Winter 1971, P. 297–298; Norbert Bromberg, 81, Retired Psychoanalyst New York Times; Verna Small, 92, leading Village preservationist
- ^ Review by Michael H. Kater: Hitler’s Psychopathology by Norbert Bromberg, Verna Volz Small. In: Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 1985, Volume 16 (1), P. 141–142
- ^ Sleigh, Alfred. Hitler: A Study in Megalomania. In: Canadian Psychiatric Association Journal, June 1966, Volume 11, Issue 3, P. 218–219
- ^ Grunberger, Béla; Dessuant, Pierre. Narcissisme, christianisme, antisémitisme : étude psychanalytique, Actes Sud: Arles, 1997. ISBN 9782742712618 (Review); Grunberger, Béla. Der Antisemit und der Ödipuskomplex, in: Psyche, Volume 16, Issue 5, January 1962, P. 255-272
- ^ Victor, George. Hitler: The Pathology of Evil, Potomac Books, 1999. ISBN 1-57488-228-7
- ^ Dorpat, Theodore. Wounded Monster. Hitler’s Path from Trauma to Malevolence, University Press of America, 2003. ISBN 0-7618-2416-2
- ^ Vinnai, Gerhard. Hitler – Scheitern und Vernichtungswut. Zur Genese des faschistischen Täters, Psychosozial-Verlag: Gießen, 2004. ISBN 978-3-89806-341-8; Gerhard Vinnai’s website
- ^ Nassir Ghaemi (4 August 2011). A First-Rate Madness: Uncovering the Links Between Leadership and Mental Illness. Penguin Publishing Group. ISBN 978-1-101-51759-8.
- ^ Tom Porter (24 August 2014). "Adolf Hitler 'Took Cocktail of Drugs' Reveal New Documents". IBTimes. Retrieved 22 November 2015.
- ^ Norman Ohler: Der totale Rausch: Drogen im Dritten Reich. Kiepenheuer & Witsch : Köln, 2015, ISBN 978-3-462-04733-2; High Hitler Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Sept. 13, 2015; Wenn das der Führer wüsste… Die Zeit, Dec. 3, 2015
- ^ Martindale, Colin; Hasenfus, Nancy; Hines, Dwight. Hitler: a neurohistorical formulation. In: Confinia psychiatrica, 1976, Volume 19, Issue 2, P. 106–116
- ^ Zilboorg, Gregory. Ambulatory Schizophrenias. In: Psychiatry, Volume 4, 1941, P. 149–155
- ^ Waite, Robert G. L. ' The Psychopathic God: Adolf Hitler, Basic Books, 1977. ISBN 0-465-06743-3; Waite, Robert G. L. Adolf Hitler’s Anti-Semitism. A Study in History and Psychoanalysis. In: Wolman, Benjamin B. (editor). The Psychoanalytic Interpretation of History, New York, London 1971, P. 192–230.
- ^ Rappaport, Ernest A. Anti-Judaism. A psychohistory, Perspective Press: Chicago, 1975. ISBN 0-9603382-0-9
- ^ Mayer, John D. The emotional madness of the dangerous leader. In: Journal of Psychohistory, Volume 20, 1993, P. 331–348
- ^ Hershman, D. Jablow; Lieb, Julian. A Brotherhood of Tyrants: Manic Depression and Absolute Power, Prometheus Books: Amherst, NY, 1994. ISBN 0-87975-888-0
- ^ Fitzgerald, Michael. Autism and creativity: is there a link between autism in men and exceptional ability?, Routledge, 2004. ISBN 1-58391-213-4. S. 25–27
- ^ Trevor-Roper, Hugh: The Last Days of Hitler, Macmillan, 1947; Bullock, Alan. Hitler: A Study in Tyranny, London, 1952; Taylor, A. J. P. The Origins of the Second World War, Simon & Schuster, 1996. ISBN 0-684-82947-9 (First published in 1961); Lütz, Manfred: Irre – wir behandeln die Falschen: Unser Problem sind die Normalen. Eine heitere Seelenkunde, Gütersloher Verlagshaus, 2009. ISBN 3-579-06879-2; Manfred Lütz: „Ich kenne keine Normalen“; Kershaw, Ian. Hitler 1936-1945: Nemesis, Penguin Books, 2001.
- ^ Ian Kershaw (25 October 2001). Hitler 1936-1945: Nemesis. Penguin Books Limited. p. 728. ISBN 978-0-14-192581-3.
- ^ Retranslated from a German translation that cites: Walters, Glenn D. Lifestyle theory: past, present, and future, Nova Science Publishers, 2006. ISBN 1-60021-033-3, P. 43
- ^ Erikson, Erik H. Childhood and Society, W. W. Norton: New York, London, 1963. ISBN 0-393-31068-X (first edition in 1950)
- ^ Brink, Terry L. The case of Hitler: An Adlerian perspective on psychohistory. In: Journal of Individual Psychology, 1975, Volume 21, P. 23–31
- ^ Lavietes, Stuart. Dr. Frederick C. Redlich, 93, Biographer of Hitler. In: The New York Times, 17. Januar 2004 (Obituary).
- ^ Redlich, Fritz. Hitler: Diagnosis of a Destructive Prophet. Oxford University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-19-505782-1
- ^ Neumann, Hans-Joachim; Eberle, Henrik. War Hitler krank? Ein abschließender Befund, Bastei Lübbe: Bergisch Gladbach, 2009. ISBN 3785723865, P. 290; War Hitler krank? Focus online, October 7th, 2009; Hitler war nicht geisteskrank – medizinisch gesehen Welt online, Dezember 2nd, 2009