Results for 'Operational art (Military science)'

9 found
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  1.  14
    The sociology of military science: prospects for postinstitutional military design.Chris Paparone - 2013 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    This groundbreaking work challenges modernist military science and explores how a more open design epistemology is becoming an attractive alternative to a military staff culture rooted in a monistic scientific paradigm. The author offers fresh sociological avenues to become more institutionally reflexive -- to offer a variety of design frames of reference, beyond those typified by modern military doctrine. Modernist military knowledge has been institutionalized to the point that blinds militaries to alternative designs organizationally and (...)
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  2.  15
    Maintaining the high ground: the profession and ethic in large-scale combat operations.C. Anthony Pfaff & Keith R. Beurskens (eds.) - 2021 - Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Army University Press.
    Part of The US Army Large-Scale Combat Operations Series, Maintaining the High Ground combines discussions and historical case studies from the past seventy-five years to address ethical challenges for the Army Profession. With today's all-volunteer Army, maintaining public trust is critical, and large-scale combat operations require a professional class of leaders and soldiers with strong ethics and the ability to adapt and even shape their own future.
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  3. Creativity in military complexity: design, disruptors and defence forces.Cara Wrigley & Murray Simons - 2025 - New York: Routledge.
    This work offers a groundbreaking exploration of the urgent need for creativity and innovation in contemporary military thought. In an era characterised by the ceaseless flux of global dynamics, traditional paradigms of warfare have become increasingly obsolete. The imperative has arisen to harness out-of-box thinking, underscoring creativity and innovation within the realm of military thought. The pursuit of victory no longer lies in the fixation upon past conflicts, but rather in the discerning assessment of and adaptation to the (...)
     
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  4.  6
    Winning wars before they emerge: from kinetic warfare to strategic communications as a proactive and mind-centric paradigm of the art of war.Torsti Sirén - 2013 - Boca Raton: Universal-Publishers.
    To avoid preparing to wage battles against our opponents in future wars, we should proactively and continuously influence the narrative identity structures of our potential opponents by using Strategic Communications (StratCom). This book argues that nations and societies of tolerance and pluralism (the so-called wonderful societies) should utilize StratCom to seduce their enemies, opponents, and potential opponents not only to behave in more tolerant ways, but above all to internalize peace, tolerance, and pluralism as essential values and guiding mental institutions (...)
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  5.  2
    (1 other version)Technology and the 21st century battlefield: recomplicating moral life for the statesman and soldier.Charles J. Dunlap - 1999 - Carlisle, Pennsylvania: Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College.
    The author starts from the traditional American notion that technology might offer a way to decrease the horror and suffering of warfare. He points out that historically this assumption is flawed in that past technological advances, from gunpowder weapons to bombers, have only made warfare more--not less--bloody. With a relentless logic, Colonel Dunlap takes to task those who say that the Revolution in Military Affairs has the potential to make war less bloody. He covers the technological landscape from precision-guided (...)
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  6.  2
    Ground truth: the moral component in contemporary British warfare.Frank Ledwidge, Helen Parr & Aaron Edwards (eds.) - 2024 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    After twenty years of almost unbroken wars of choice, the deficiencies in the ethical and operational conduct of war by Western armed forces, has largely been ignored by scholarly critique. This volume addresses these deficiencies and demonstrates that they in fact represent the culmination of decades of erosion of military professionalism. Contributions in this edited collection are written by some of the UK's leading soldiers, veterans and scholars working in the fields of military ethics and contemporary conflict.
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  7.  10
    Technology, ethics and the protocols of modern war.Artur Gruszczak & Pawel Frankowski (eds.) - 2018 - New York, NY: Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group.
    Contemporary security has expanded its meaning, content and structure in response to globalization and the emergence of greatly improved world-wide communication. This book addresses how and why the nature of security has changed and what this means for the security actors involved and the wider society. The expert contributors reflect upon new communication methods, post-modern concepts of warfare, technological determinants and cultural preferences to provide new theoretical and analytical insights into a changing security environment and the protocols of war in (...)
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  8.  7
    La guerre: la penser & la faire.Benoist Bihan - 2020 - [Paris]: Jean-Cyrille Godefroy.
    "Plus qu'aucun autre pays européen, la France fait usage de ses forces armées, engagées sans relâche dans des «)opérations extérieures)» au long cours dont il est parfois difficile de discerner la cohérence d'ensemble. En tête des institutions préférées des Français, qui voient en elles une valeur refuge dans une société désorientée, les Armées ont vu disparaître le climat d'antimilitarisme des années 1970. Mais l'opprobre n'a pas été remplacé par une meilleure compréhension de ce qui guide l'action de guerre. Or la (...)
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  9.  79
    Adopting AI: how familiarity breeds both trust and contempt.Michael C. Horowitz, Lauren Kahn, Julia Macdonald & Jacquelyn Schneider - forthcoming - AI and Society:1-15.
    Despite pronouncements about the inevitable diffusion of artificial intelligence and autonomous technologies, in practice, it is human behavior, not technology in a vacuum, that dictates how technology seeps into—and changes—societies. To better understand how human preferences shape technological adoption and the spread of AI-enabled autonomous technologies, we look at representative adult samples of US public opinion in 2018 and 2020 on the use of four types of autonomous technologies: vehicles, surgery, weapons, and cyber defense. By focusing on these four diverse (...)
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