Captive Minds

A Study of Manipulation

Avishai Margalit author Assaf Sharon author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Harvard University Press

Publishing:29th May '26

£24.95

This title is due to be published on 29th May, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Captive Minds cover

From philosophers Avishai Margalit and Assaf Sharon, an erudite yet approachable inquiry into political manipulation and the grave threat it poses to human freedom today.

Manipulation is as old as history itself, yet Aldous Huxley’s paraphrase of Churchill rings truer than ever: “never have so many been manipulated so much by so few.” Manipulation presents a clear danger to liberal democracy today. Demagogues undermine civic discussion, and propagandists and conspiracy theorists create cognitive traps that erode critical thinking.

What exactly is manipulation, and what sets it apart from other forms of influence? How does it differ from convincing, attracting, or nudging? Drawing on examples from mythology, literature, history, and politics, philosophers Margalit and Sharon argue that manipulation is not just a form of deceit and intellectual harm; it is, above all, an exercise of power. Manipulation exploits mental weaknesses and vulnerabilities with the goal of establishing control. Whereas liberal philosophers overlook manipulation, instead treating coercion as the primary form of political domination, Margalit and Sharon argue that manipulation should be seen as coercion’s insidious counterpart in undermining human freedom.

Public support is fundamental to the legitimacy of government. Today, political manipulation is corrupting the formation and expression of public opinion, making manipulation a driving force of the global crisis of democratic decline. A timely work, but also a work for all times, Captive Minds stands as the definitive study of a pervasive threat to political freedom and the increasingly fragile institutions that sustain it.

Margalit and Sharon give us a brilliant account of manipulation, showing it to be the central means of acquiring and exercising power today. By revealing how manipulation works, they enable us to work against it. Their book is a powerful call for democratic reason, beautifully illustrated with examples drawn from history and literature. -- Michael Walzer, author of Just and Unjust Wars
This is an exceptional and original study of manipulation, marked by its depth, subtlety, and erudition. A theoretically dazzling and historically sumptuous account of how seduction and intimidation, among other insidious ploys, can supplant fair dealing and rational persuasion, corrupting the very channels of communication through which we attempt to govern ourselves, and transforming them into a deluge of malevolent, scheming machinations. -- Stephen Holmes, coauthor of The Light That Failed
A brilliant work. Margalit and Sharon show how the tightening grip of manipulation in our politics and media poses a fundamental threat to our freedom. They offer a masterful and indispensable guide to how manipulation works, why we fall for it, and why we need new tools to fight back. -- Elizabeth Anderson, author of Private Government
Margalit and Sharon have written an eye-opening book — elegantly crafted, subtly argued, deeply persuasive, and overflowing with original insights. Their arguments about the meaning of manipulation and its central role in politics are of utmost importance for today’s democracies and demand our urgent attention. -- Ivan Krastev, coauthor of The Light That Failed

ISBN: 9780674303102

Dimensions: 235mm x 156mm x 19mm

Weight: 577g

288 pages