Thucydides Roundtable, Addendum: Fellow Thucydideans
Thucydides charts the impact of war on the character of the states involved. He uses Athens’ transformation as a cautionary tale about what war will do to a state unprepared for its influence and of the cost of applying power unwisely or unjustly in the pursuit of a political objective. His writing is grounded in the understanding that war’s nature is inextricably linked to human nature, which in turn shapes the strategic and military culture that manifest in war’s character and the political objectives for which it is fought. Through a narrative approach, his work serves as a warning about the moral decline of society over the course of protracted war. In doing so he demonstrates several points relevant for all wars, including today’s: War’s nature is unchanging and is based on the contest for power. “Fear, honour, and interest” are human characteristics immutable through time and have generally been the cause of wars throughout history.[2] These characteristics shape strategic and military culture and in turn the character of a given war. And the creation of a political objective based on a state’s vital interests is imperative in the formulation of a winning strategy.
That’s it.
Page 2 of 2 | Previous page
Graham:
December 1st, 2016 at 4:28 pm
It must be a Thucydidean moment. Commander Salamander at USNI blogs on the subject:
https://blog.usni.org/2016/11/30/21st-century-thucydides
Graham:
December 1st, 2016 at 4:32 pm
Aand the circle completes itself- a commenter at CDRSalamander refers readers to this roundtable.
zen:
December 1st, 2016 at 4:36 pm
Ha! Fear, Honor and Interest is not a trinity but a circle