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For centuries liberal minded men have been horrified by the pain and waste of war. From Erasmus, who saw war above all as a product of stupidity, to the Marxists who see it as a matter of class conflict, they have produced social theories to account for its occurrence and have tried to devise means to end it.
Their prescriptions have been various. The central view of the Enlightenment was that wars would end when the ambitions of princes could be curbed by the sanity of ordinary men. At first the commercial classes seemed to be the new force that would produce this happy state, but by the end of the nineteenth century they themselves (the 'capitalists') were being stigmatized as the instigators of war.Michael Howard is now Professor of the History of War at Oxford University, having formerly held the Chair of War Studies at King's College, London. He has written extensively on questions of war and peace over the past twenty years: his most recent works include a translation (With Peter Paret) of Clausewitz On War, and a short survey of War in European History to which this work can be seen in some sense as a companion volume. He is Vice-Chairman both of the Royal Institute for International Affairs and of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and Vice-President of the Council on Christian Approaches to Arms Control and Disarmament.
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