01984cam a2200349Ma 4500001001300000003000600013005001700019008004100036015001900077020002800096020003100124035002200155040002400177050001600201100011500217245007400332250001500406260005000421300002800471336002600499500003200525500002400557504005100581505055300632520024801185650004101433650001601474650000901490650002601499650006701525650004201592on1110477940OCoLC20241114095622.0011112s2001 nyu b 001 0 eng d aGBA1671582bnb a0231125372q(paperback) a9780231125376q(paperback) a(OCoLC)1110477940 bengcGAFCSC LIBRARY00aJZ1316bW171 aWaltz, Kenneth N.q(Kenneth Neal),d1924-2013.1https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJjCMB4jTqmgHvYvKydxXd10aMan, the state and war :ba theoretical analysis /cKenneth N. Waltz. a[New ed.]. aNew York :bColumbia University Press,c2001. axvi, 263 pages ;c21 cm atextbtxt2rdacontent aOriginally published: 1959. aWith a new preface. aIncludes bibliographical references and index.1 aForeword, by by William T.R. Fox Introduction The First Image: International Conflict and Human Behavior Some Implications of the First Image: The Behavioral Sciences and the Reduction of Interstate Violence The Second Image: International Conflict and the Internal Structure of States Some Implications of the Second Image: International Socialism and the Coming of the First World War The Third Image: International Conflict and International Anarchy Some Implications of the Third Image: Examples from Economics, Politics, and History Conclusion8 aWhat are the causes of war? Waltz probes the ideas that thinkers throughout the history of Western civilisation - including St. Augustine, Hobbes, Kant, & Spinoza - have offered to explain the reasons for men & related prescriptions for peace. 0aInternational relationsxPhilosophy. 0aState, The. 0aWar. 7aarmed conflicts.2aat 7aInternational relationsxPhilosophy.2fast0(OCoLC)fst00977075 7aState, The.2fast0(OCoLC)fst01131943