This book, the first of its kind, provides a sweeping critical
history of social theories about war and peace from Hobbes to the
present. Distinguished social theorists Hans Joas and Wolfgang
Knobl present both a broad intellectual history and an original
argument as they trace the development of thinking about war over
more than 350 years--from the premodern era to the period of German
idealism and the Scottish and French enlightenments, and then from
the birth of sociology in the nineteenth century through the
twentieth century. While focusing on social thought, the book draws
on many disciplines, including philosophy, anthropology, and
political science.
Joas and Knobl demonstrate the profound difficulties most social
thinkers--including liberals, socialists, and those intellectuals
who could be regarded as the first sociologists--had in coming to
terms with the phenomenon of war, the most obvious form of
large-scale social violence. With only a few exceptions, these
thinkers, who believed deeply in social progress, were unable to
account for war because they regarded it as marginal or archaic,
and on the verge of disappearing. This overly optimistic picture of
the modern world persisted in social theory even in the twentieth
century, as most sociologists and social theorists either ignored
war and violence in their theoretical work or tried to explain it
away. The failure of the social sciences and especially sociology
to understand war, Joas and Knobl argue, must be seen as one of the
greatest weaknesses of disciplines that claim to give a convincing
diagnosis of our times."
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