War as Paradox - Clausewitz and Hegel on Fighting Doctrines and Ethics

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Two centuries after Carl von Clausewitz wrote On War, it lines the shelves of military colleges around the world and even showed up in an Al Qaeda hideout. Though it has shaped much of the common parlance on the subject, On War is perceived by many as a "metaphysical fog," widely known but hardly read. In War as Paradox, Youri Cormier lifts the fog on this iconic work by explaining its philosophical underpinnings. Building up a genealogy of dialectical war theory and integrating Hegel with Clausewitz as a co-founders of the method, Cormier uncovers a common logic that shaped the fighting doctrines and ethics of modern war. He explains how Hegel and Clausewitz converged on method, but nonetheless arrived at opposite ethics and military doctrines. Ultimately, Cormier seeks out the limits to dialectical war theory and explores the greater paradoxes the method reveals: can so-called "rational" theories of war hold up under the pressures of irrational propositions, such as lone-wolf attacks, the circular logic of a "war to end all wars," or the apparent folly of mutually assured destruction? Since the Second World War, commentators have described war as obsolete. War as Paradox argues that dialectical war theory may be the key to understanding why, despite this, it continues.

Author(s): Youri Cormier
Series: McGill-Queen's Studies in the History of Ideas
Publisher: McGill-Queen’s University Press
Year: 2016

Language: English

Cover
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Note
Introduction
1 How to Approach Claims That Hegel and Clausewitz Generate Self-Fulfilling Prophecies and War Mongering
2 Perfection and Certainty in Metaphysics and War Theory
3 Clausewitz’s Scepticism: The First Dialectical Moment
4 The Decay and Resilience of Positive Doctrines from Jomini to the Twentieth Century
5 Real and Absolute War: The Second Dialectical Moment
6 Transitioning from Kantianism to Hegelianism
7 The Unresolved Ethical Impasse in Dialectical War Theory
8 Framing War as a Right: The “Actualization” of Freedom
9 Clausewitz and Hegel: Where the Convergence on Method Begins
10 Clausewitz and Hegel: The Convergence Peaks in On War’s Book I, Chapter 1, as the Divergence on Ethics Sharpens
11 Fighting Doctrines and Revolutionary Ethics
Epilogue
Bibliography
Index