1st Edition

Understanding War An Essay on the Nuclear Age

By W B Gallie *Decd*, W. B. Gallie Copyright 1991

    First published in 1990. With the exception of Clausewitz, no reflective thinker has seriously engaged with the concept of war - with its persistent changeability and the dominant direction of its changes. The results of this failure are seen in the extreme logical weakness of most debates, during the last two centuries, on the possibility of eliminating war and, since 1945, on the possibility of eliminating nuclear weapons. Orderly, clear, and reflective, Understanding War develops two main theses: first, that the horrendous escalation of war's destructiveness in this century is primarily the result of the inherently cumulative character of war itself rather than of the application to war of recent science-based technologies; and second, that the irreversible destructiveness of nuclear weapons suggests how joint action by the superpowers could prevent their being used in any future war.

    Chapter 1 Man as a war-making animal; Chapter 2 The underlying fallacy in the nuclear debate; Chapter 3 Our received idea of war; Chapter 4 War: an inherently cumulative process; Chapter 5 War and power; Chapter 6 The unlearnt lessons of the nuclear age; Chapter 7 War Studies, Peace Studies and Survival Studies

    Biography

    W. B. Gallie is Emeritus Professor of Political Science at the University of Cambridge. He has taught and written widely in philosophy, politics and the history of ideas – including military ideas – and saw over five years’ military service in World War II.