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- 2010012041 contributor B11751018.
- 2010012041 created "c2010.".
- 2010012041 date "2010".
- 2010012041 date "c2010.".
- 2010012041 dateCopyrighted "c2010.".
- 2010012041 description "Includes bibliographical references and index.".
- 2010012041 description "Rousseau's complaint -- Dialectics of warfare : war and peace -- Pascal's rules -- Why war? Why war changes the world and is itself transformed by the changes it promotes (Heraclitus of Ephesus c.540-480 BC) -- War and human ambition : why the rules of war are paradoxical (Thucydides c.460-400 BC) -- War and the soul : why war is trinitarian (Plato (1) c.427-347 BC) -- War and art : why war encourages imitation (Plato (2)) -- War and politics : why war is a continuation of politics by other means, and not its negation (Aristotle 384-322 BC) -- War as pacification ; why war can be seen as policing (Tacitus AD 54-120) -- War and peace : why peace is a contested concept (St. Augustine AD 354-430) -- War and social norms ; why we still distrust mercenaries (Machiavelli 1469-1527) -- War and human nature : why war (unlike warfare) encourages competitiveness, not competition (Thomas Hobbes 1588-1679) -- War and battle : why battles are rarely 'decisive' (Montesquieu 1689-1755) -- War and ethics : why we should respect our enemies even if they don't respect us (Immanuel Kant 1724-1804) -- War and history : why war is often 'ethical' (or progressive) (Hegel 1770-1831) -- War and technology : why weapons have a social history (Marx 1818-83) -- War and culture : why war has its own 'cultural grammar' (Engels 1820-1895) -- War and the warrior : why the warrior is a human type (Nietzsche 1844-1900) -- War and the future : why war is not a science (Heisenberg 1901-76).".
- 2010012041 extent "vi, 278 p. ;".
- 2010012041 identifier "0231701985 (alk. paper)".
- 2010012041 identifier "9780231701983 (alk. paper)".
- 2010012041 issued "2010".
- 2010012041 issued "c2010.".
- 2010012041 language "eng".
- 2010012041 publisher "New York : Columbia University Press,".
- 2010012041 subject "355.0201 22".
- 2010012041 subject "B105.W3 C65 2010".
- 2010012041 subject "War (Philosophy) History Sources.".
- 2010012041 tableOfContents "Rousseau's complaint -- Dialectics of warfare : war and peace -- Pascal's rules -- Why war? Why war changes the world and is itself transformed by the changes it promotes (Heraclitus of Ephesus c.540-480 BC) -- War and human ambition : why the rules of war are paradoxical (Thucydides c.460-400 BC) -- War and the soul : why war is trinitarian (Plato (1) c.427-347 BC) -- War and art : why war encourages imitation (Plato (2)) -- War and politics : why war is a continuation of politics by other means, and not its negation (Aristotle 384-322 BC) -- War as pacification ; why war can be seen as policing (Tacitus AD 54-120) -- War and peace : why peace is a contested concept (St. Augustine AD 354-430) -- War and social norms ; why we still distrust mercenaries (Machiavelli 1469-1527) -- War and human nature : why war (unlike warfare) encourages competitiveness, not competition (Thomas Hobbes 1588-1679) -- War and battle : why battles are rarely 'decisive' (Montesquieu 1689-1755) -- War and ethics : why we should respect our enemies even if they don't respect us (Immanuel Kant 1724-1804) -- War and history : why war is often 'ethical' (or progressive) (Hegel 1770-1831) -- War and technology : why weapons have a social history (Marx 1818-83) -- War and culture : why war has its own 'cultural grammar' (Engels 1820-1895) -- War and the warrior : why the warrior is a human type (Nietzsche 1844-1900) -- War and the future : why war is not a science (Heisenberg 1901-76).".
- 2010012041 title "Barbarous philosophers : reflections on the nature of war from Heraclitus to Heisenberg / Christopher Coker.".
- 2010012041 type "text".