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In 1943 William Donovan the director of the Office of Strategic
Services (the forerunner to the CIA) approached Harvard
psychologist Walter Langer and asked him to construct a
psychological profile of Adolf Hitler.
Despite his reservations regarding the reliability of the data
upon which his analysis would be based, Langer set about this
unprecedented task by putting together a team of psychologists and
researchers. Langer and his research team had just five months to
produce their findings, in which time they interviewed key
informants who knew Hitler personally and drew upon over 1000 pages
of background research from a document known as The Hitler Source
Book.
In order to try and understand Hitler as a person and the
motivations underlying his actions, Langer presents his
psychological profile within five specific sections
1. Hitler as he believes himself to be.
2. Hitler as the German people know him.
3. Hitler as his associated know him.
4. Hitler as he knows himself.
5. Psychological analysis and reconstruction.
Freudianism at its Height
In constructing a psychological analysis of Hitler, Langer drew
heavily upon the ideas of Sigmund Freud, most notably the
developmental influence of early childhood experiences. As such the
report provides the reader with a fascinating window into the
mechanics of Freudian analysis. Among the issues discussed within
this paradigm are:
Hitler's character as influenced by his father.
Hitler's mother and her influence.
Hitler's attitude towards love, women and marriage.
Hitler's early conflicts expressed in symbolic form.
The Messiah Complex.
Desire for immortality.
Hitler's Sexual development.
A Classic in The History of Psychology
Langer's report on Adolf Hitler not only showcased the dominant
discourse of psychological analysis at the time, but it also served
as the catalyst for the development of political profiling as a
discipline.
Psychology Gets Political
Without doubt the greatest legacy of Langer's report was the
influence it had on the field of political profiling. Dr Jerrold
Post cites Langer's analysis of Hitler as the inspiration for the
profiling unit he established at the CIA in the 1970s; which would
subsequently go on to profile every important world leader up to
and including Saddam Hussein.
In discussing Langer's psychological profile of Hitler during an
interview with the BBC, Post stated:
""We must understand the leaders we are contending with - you
can't deter optimally a leader you don't understand - and to
relegate be it a Hitler or a Joseph Stalin or a Saddam Hussein to a
crazy evil madman really degrades our capacity to deal with them
optimally because we're not thinking about what pushes them, what
makes them tick.""
While the value of political profiling remains open to question,
the seminal importance of Langer's psychological study of Hitler in
influencing the discipline is not.
A Psychological Analysis of Adolf Hitler has been produced as part
of an initiative by the website All About Psychology to make
important psychology publications widely available.
www.all-about-psychology.com
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