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The Code of the Warrior

Exploring Warrior Values Past and Present

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
This revised and expanded second edition of The Code of the Warrior—a book George R. Lucas has described as "groundbreaking" and "now part of the Military Ethics canon"—takes the reader on a tour of warrior cultures and their values, from the ancient Greeks and Romans to the "barbaric" Vikings and Celts, from chivalric knights to Native American tribesmen, from Chinese warrior monks pursuing enlightenment to Japanese samurai practicing death. This new edition enhances these discussions with analyses of modern-day warriors and examines the ethical dimensions of emerging military technology such as drones, cyber warfare, and bio-enhanced troops. A new chapter also addresses the Islamic warrior code, both in its historic and modern implementations. Drawing these historical traditions up to the present, this book seeks a code for the warriors of today, as they do battle in asymmetric conflicts both remotely and face-to-face against the scourge of global terrorism. This book offers a comprehensive survey of historic and modern warrior cultures for students of military history, philosophy, and ethics.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 20, 2003
      This dense, absorbing and valuable book studies the ethics governing warriors throughout history. French, a professor of philosophy and ethics at the U. S. Naval Academy, believes that the warrior needs an ethical framework not only to be an effective fighter but to remain a human being—and even to save his or her soul. With amazingly smooth writing for an academic study, she surveys the warrior ethic of various cultures as revealed in histories and, especially, their literatures, from the Iliad
      of ancient Greece to the codes of conduct of the Japanese Samurai. Hector, the Trojan hero, emerges as one of the ideal warriors portrayed in literature; his opponent Achilles comes off less well. The Roman legions were caught between hedonism and stoicism, but their matchless esprit de corps
      survived. And both the Shaolin monks, by inventing kung-fu, and the Plains Indians, by adapting to the horse, sought honor and effectiveness alike with grim determination. Guest essayist Felicia Ackerman points out that the Knights of the Round Table often avoided dishonor but not always stupidity, and of course the cult of vengeance among the Vikings and the Japanese practice of maintaining honor by seppuku
      took a bloody toll. Clearly written, with impressive erudition, balance and wit, this book will be agreeable reading for warriors, warriors in training or anyone interested in their welfare, although it demands a moderate to high degree of cultural literacy.

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  • English

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