milligrams of amphetamine were administered to volunteer subjects every hour until every subject crossed their particular threshold for personality change. The graduate students underwent a global mind-brain-person transition at differing total doses of amphetamine. The subject’s world was suddenly transformed into one of enemies and friends. The syndrome dissipated over several hours when the drug was stopped and the plasma levels of amphetamine and its metabolites declined. As amphetamine makes memory formation and recall stronger, the subjects were embarrassed when remembering what strange and forbidding yet uneatable things they so strongly believed. These included such things as: they as good people were caught in a network of bad person Russian spies; some threatening others arranged for poison gas to be seeping out of the water faucet; the white coated scientists were CIA undercover intelligence officers hoping to get information about their small pornography collection. The subject's world had become divided in, for each person, a stereotyped way. After a couple of weeks of return to normal living, the experiment was repeated. Each subject again developed his or her individually unique set of good- guy, bad-guy delusional beliefs and at the same dose of amphetamine as before. Like those of strong faith, their ideas once again resisted the logical arguments made by the professional staff: that the new realities were neuropsychological and had an obvious pharmacological origin. While on the drug, all stuck to their story, even while being shown the movie record of their first drug-induced episode. There is reliable scientific literature describing kamikaze pilots on high doses of amphetamine in an ecstatic state of Shinto nationalism. With their planes loaded with explosives, they deliberately crashed their planes onto American aircraft carriers in the Pacific Theater of World War II. One wonders if these drug-induced states occur in the drug-free condition i