1. Summary
The causes of the war are examined in history, psychology, anthropology, sociology, information, economics, Marxism.
-History
By the beginning of every war, some leaders make conscious decisions and claim that they are not entirely accidental.
- Psychology
These theories can explain why war occurs, but do not explain when and how. And it raises questions about why there are other times when there is a long period of peace and war.
If war is innate in human nature, war is male activity and women have leadership, war does not happen.
- Anthropology
War is viewed culturally and learned by nature. If human society is reformed, I think war will disappear. All wars are initiated not by public pressure but by the whims of leaders, and I think leaders also try to maintain an ideological justification for war.
- Sociology
Sociology has long developed with interest in the origins of war. Many sociologists wanted to divide the type of war into better correlations, which resulted in mixed results.
- Information science
The theory developed by international scholars argues that all wars are based on a lack of information. If we knew how to start the war, the loser would give up the cost of the lives and infrastructure that war would bring. War is at odds and is based on the notion that all war attacks need to be decided against.
-Economics
claim that war can be seen as a derivative of economic competition in a competitive international system I think war begins with the pursuit of new markets, active resources and wealth.
-Marxism
I think war is about strengthening the power of the ruling class and confronting each other for artificial ideals such as nationalism and religion. War is a natural scourge of free markets and class systems and I don't think it will go away until the world revolution occurs.
2. Interesting
This is the first time I have seen war in history, psychology, anthropology, sociology, intelligence, economics. Marxism was also likely to use class theory to explain war, which was really explained using class theory.
3. Discussion
How does information society interpret war?
No comments:
Post a Comment