Lexington Books
Pages: 282
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-9224-5 • Hardback • May 2014 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
978-0-7391-9461-4 • Paperback • April 2016 • $59.99 • (£46.00)
978-0-7391-9225-2 • eBook • May 2014 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
Ben Novak is an independent scholar with an interdisciplinary Ph.D. in history, philosophy, and political science from Pennsylvania State University.
Chapter 1: The Historical Problem of Hitler
Chapter 2: The Third Logic: The Background and Formal Structure of Abduction
Chapter 3: Characteristics of Abduction
Chapter 4: Abductive Logic in Literature
Chapter 5: The Application of Peirce's Abductive Theory to Unraveling the Mystery of Hitler's Youth
Chapter 6: The Genesis of the Fuehrer: The Birth of Hitler's Character
Chapter 7: In That Hour it Began
Chapter 8: Closing Argument: How Did He Do It?
Hitler and Abductive Logic: The Strategy of a Tyrant is thought-provoking and extremely creative, exploring aspects and influences of Hitler’s formative years that other biographers and historians have not examined to the same degree of detail. The application of the logic of abduction to Hitler’s mental development is fascinating, and clearly no other author has tried to apply Peirce’s description to Hitler in such a way.
— Beth A. Griech-Polelle, Pacific Lutheran University
Hitler and Abductive Logic is not bedtime reading or any sort of literature for those who, even while learning about catastrophe, expect silver linings to grace the clouds. Nonetheless, it is an immensely powerful work which not only researchers of World War II should read, but anyone who is prepared for an education in how raw power is coveted, worked toward, obtained, and sustained for purposes so horrific that they roam beyond what words can describe.
— San Francisco Review of Books
The amount of literature on Adolf Hitler is astounding. And yet, as Ben Novak demonstrates, historians still have not fully explained how this ill-educated and irrational provincial Austrian actually rose to power in Germany. This work uses the concept of abductive logic both as a means of investigating the mystery of Hitler's rise to power and as a way to understand the mind and character of Hitler. Novak's book, written in an engaging narrative style, offers a compelling argument for a new approach to the mystery of Hitler's rise to power.
— Jackson Spielvogel, Pennsylvania State University
Hitler and Abductive Logic: The Strategy of a Tyrant is thought-provoking and extremely creative, exploring aspects and influences of Hitler’s formative years that other biographers and historians have not examined to the same degree of detail. The application of the logic of abduction to Hitler’s mental development is fascinating, and clearly no other author has tried to apply Peirce’s description to Hitler in such a way.
— Beth A. Griech-Polelle, Pacific Lutheran University
The amount of literature on Adolf Hitler is astounding. And yet, as Ben Novak demonstrates, historians still have not fully explained how this ill-educated and irrational provincial Austrian actually rose to power in Germany. This work uses the concept of abductive logic both as a means of investigating the mystery of Hitler's rise to power and as a way to understand the mind and character of Hitler. Novak's book, written in an engaging narrative style, offers a compelling argument for a new approach to the mystery of Hitler's rise to power.
— Jackson Spielvogel, Pennsylvania State University