Skip to content

Booksellers & Trade Customers: Sign up for online bulk buying at trade.atlanticbooks.com for wholesale discounts

Booksellers: Create Account on our B2B Portal for wholesale discounts

Persuasion Trap: The Case of Eduard Von Hartmann

by Boris Kriger
Save 12% Save 12%
Current price ₹1,972.00
Original price ₹2,244.00
Original price ₹2,244.00
Original price ₹2,244.00
(-12%)
₹1,972.00
Current price ₹1,972.00

Imported Edition - Ships in 18-21 Days

Free Shipping in India on orders above Rs. 500

Request Bulk Quantity Quote
+91
Book cover type: Paperback
  • ISBN13: 9798197157102
  • Binding: Paperback
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Independently Published
  • Publisher Imprint: Independently Published
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 308
  • Original Price: GBP 17.26
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 413 grams
  • BISAC Subject(s): Individual Philosophers

Every age has its loud philosophers. In 1869 a young Prussian named Eduard von Hartmann published a thousand-page book about an invisible force he called the Unconscious - a force, he claimed, that guided everything from the growth of plants to the rise and fall of civilizations. The book sold out. It went through eleven editions in his lifetime. Educated Germans agreed that something profound had been said. Then, slowly, almost everyone forgot it.
This book is not a portrait of Eduard von Hartmann. It is an investigation, conducted through his case, into a phenomenon that runs through public speech today as surely as it ran through nineteenth-century philosophy. The phenomenon has a name: the persuasion trap. It is the moment when someone speaks with enough confidence, enough rhythm, enough density of vocabulary that listeners agree before they have understood - and then mistake their agreement for evidence that something true has been said.
Hartmann did not invent the trap. He fell into it, brilliantly and honestly, and built a complete philosophical system inside it. That is what makes his case so useful. He was not a fraud. He was not lazy. He worked for decades, with discipline and erudition, to defend an idea that explained everything and therefore nothing - and a million readers thanked him for it.
Hartmann himself emerges in these pages with the respect any serious thinker deserves. The trap is the villain, not the man.
Keywords: persuasion, rhetoric, philosophy of language, intellectual history, critical thinking, cognitive bias, public discourse

Trusted for over 49 years

Family Owned Company

Secure Payment

All Major Credit Cards/Debit Cards/UPI & More Accepted

New & Authentic Products

India's Largest Distributor

Need Support?

Whatsapp Us