James M. Dubik - Battles and Campaigns: Just War Reconsidered : Strategy, Ethics, and Theory ebook TXT, EPUB

9780813168296


0813168295
In the seminal Just and Unjust Wars , Michael Walzer famously considered the ethics of modern warfare, examining the moral issues that arise before, during, and after conflict. However, Walzer and subsequent scholars have often limited their analyses of the ethics of combat to soldiers on the ground and failed to recognize the moral responsibilities of senior political and military leaders. In Just War Reconsidered: Strategy, Ethics, and Theory, James M. Dubik draws on years of research as well as his own experiences as a soldier and teacher to fill the gaps left by other theorists. He applies moral philosophy, political philosophy, and strategic studies to historical and contemporary case studies to reveal the inaccuracies and moral bankruptcy that inform some of the literature on military ethics. Conventional just war theory adopts a binary approach, wherein political leaders have moral accountability for the decision to go to war and soldiers have accountability for fighting the war ethically. Dubik argues, however, that political and military leadership should be held accountable for the planning and execution of war in addition to the decision to initiate conflict. Dubik bases his sober reassessment on the fundamental truth that war risks the lives of soldiers and innocents as well as the political and social health of communities. He offers new standards to evaluate the ethics of warfare in the hope of increasing the probability that the lives of soldiers will not be used in vain and the innocent not put at risk unnecessarily.

Download ebook Battles and Campaigns: Just War Reconsidered : Strategy, Ethics, and Theory by James M. Dubik in PDF, EPUB, TXT

The contributors challenge popular assumptions about what modernism looks like and what modernity is.Democratic Humanism and American Literature illustrates the interplay between democratic assumptions and literaryperformance in the works of America's classic nineteenth-century writers-Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville, Cooper,Poe, Whitman, Twain, and James.Drawing on extensive research, including many studies from the author's own lab, this book shows why emotions work to encourage reasonable moral behaviour, and why they sometimes fail.The first of four thematic sections, African Newspaper Networks, considers the work that newspaper editors did to relate events within their locality to happenings in far-off places.This book reconstructs James's overlooked political thought by treating his anti-imperialist Nachlass -- his speeches, essays, notes, and correspondence on the United States' annexation of the Philippines -- as the key to unlocking the political significance of his celebrated writings on psychology, religion, and philosophy.They were also linked by the spread of disease, and so we begin with the greatest of allEuropean catastrophes: the 1348 bubonic plague, which killed one person in three.Prosocial Development examines a variety of biological, socialization, and contextual influences on prosocial development from infancy through early adulthood.While the majority of contributors are Canadian, several are from Australia, Ireland and the UK.Through the work and scholarship inspired by Richard Sorabji in his series of translations of the commentators started in the 1980s, these ancient texts have become a key field within ancient philosophy.