Men, Machines & WarWilfrid Laurier Univ. Press, 1988 M11 30 - 219 páginas Using examples from the last two centuries, this collection of essays discusses the close links between technology and war. In the opening essay, distinguished historian William H. McNeill demonstrates the extent to which military technology has often led to differentiations among people, both within and between societies. The other studies examine various aspects of weapons technology, drawing on the history of the armed forces of Britain, Prussia, and Australia, among others. Some of these illustrate how the adoption of new weaponry frequently depended as much on national pride and party politics as it did on the purely technical merits of the weapons involved; that financial considerations became increasingly primary in technological developments in British army after World War I; and that decisions made prior to 1939 about the aviation technology to be developed for military purposes largely determined what kind of the RAF was able to fight. The chapter by Dr. G.R. Lindsay, the Chief of the Operational Research and Analysis Establishment at the Department of National Defence Headquarters in Ottawa, makes the case that, with nuclear weapons added to the scene, the impact of technology on international security has never been as great as at present, and that the competition of nations seeking the technological edge in weaponry threatens to destabilize the precarious balance that has existed since 1945. |
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... continued long after chariots had lost their role in war , due to two new technological developments that combined to make the erstwhile mas- ters of the battlefield into merely ceremonial and sporting vehicles after 1000 BC . One was ...
... Improvements in design that made portability and power more nearly compatible therefore continued until the time of Trajan , but nothing else . Later on , after the depopulation and impoverishment of the 10 Men , Machines , and War.
... continued political diver- sity was that monopolizing guns was far more difficult in a place where miners and metallurgists abounded as nowhere else . More decisive still was the fact that , shortly before Charles v ascended the ...
... continued through World War 11. Peace brought almost no interruption . The atomic clouds of 1945 hung too ominously over the world for that to happen . Since Korea ( 1950-52 ) , when conventional weaponry came again into use ...
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Contenido
21 | |
Observations on the Dialectics of British Tactics 190445 | 49 |
The Royal Navy and Technological Change 18151945 | 75 |
The Influence of Technology on Airpower 191945 | 93 |
Artillery from 1815 to 1914 | 113 |
Technology Society and International Security Since 1945 | 153 |
Australias Owen Gun Story | 183 |
Index | 215 |