Acknowledgments
Preface to the Paperback Edition
Preface
Part I
-Technique and the redefinition of categories
-Values and technology change
-Industry as a science-based system; questions for government
-The ambivalences of the enterprise
Part II 1830-1870
-Technical change and war at sea
-Anglo-French cooperation and rivalry
-Technical change and war on land
-Railways and strategy: 1859-1866-1870
-The main enterprises
-‘War’ and ‘Peace’ redefined: Cobden
Part III 1870-1914
-The requirements of power after 1870
-New rationales for war; the fittest and how they survive: Schmoller
-Enterprises in the new setting; exports
-National strategy and the ‘timetable’ effect: Tirpitz and Schleiffen
-‘The Plan’ and its consequences: the Critique of Bloch
-Balkan nationalism and industrialized war
Part IV 1914-1918
-Upheaval in the European industrial system
-The application of new technologies: war as a ‘total’ activity
Part V 1919-1939
-New states - new conflicts - new definitions
-‘Aggression,’ its prevention and costs; the lessons of world war
-Security in the air age: reassessments of ‘civil’ and ‘military’
-Strategy as public works - Maginot
-Options and the industrial system; air rearmament in Germany and Britain
Part VI 1939-
-The conscription of pure science: methods and operations
-‘War’ and ‘Peace’ at the limits of knowledge: nuclear war
-‘Civil’ and ‘Military’ in the nuclear age; the state as researcher, producer and user
Conclusions
Notes and References
Select Bibliography
Index