Built just before RISC, the 432 took CISC to the extreme, putting everything possible into hardware rather than software: objects, garbage collection, etc. Intel called it the Silicon Operating System. With no user-visible registers, instructions were stack and memory-based.
Minimizing the "semantic gap" between high-level languages and assembly language was a big thing back then. The 432 was designed for the Ada language with instructions to perform high-level operations. The Ada compiler was $30,000; we're spoiled now by open-source compilers.