
LUIGI BLANCH
PREFAZIONE A QUESTA SECONDA EDIZIONE
AVVERTIMENTO DELLA PRIMA EDIZIONE
DISCORSO I
DISCORSO II
DISCORSO III
DISCORSO IV
DISCORSO V
DISCORSO VI
DISCORSO VII
In this thoughtful work the author treats the science of war not as an isolated art but as a mirror of the whole society that produces it. Drawing on feedback from French, Prussian and other foreign military journals, he expands the original edition into a broader historical narrative that links battlefield tactics with economics, legislation, philosophy and literature. The preface explains why the author chose to weave these diverse disciplines together, arguing that an army is essentially a miniature society whose development reflects the civilization of its people.
He examines how advances in exact and natural sciences set the stage for new military strategies, while moral sciences such as public law and economics shape the ethical and logistical framework of campaigns. By tracing parallel developments from antiquity through the medieval period to the modern era, the book shows how shifts in knowledge and social organization repeatedly reshaped the conduct of war. Listeners will find a rich tapestry of historical insight that invites them to reconsider the battlefield as a complex, civic phenomenon rather than a mere clash of arms.
Language
it
Duration
~9 hours (554K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Claudio Paganelli, Barbara Magni and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (Images generously made available by Editore Laterza and the Biblioteca Italiana at http://www.bibliotecaitaliana.it/ScrittoriItalia)
Release date
2015-03-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1784–1872
Drawn from the turbulent politics of Naples, this 19th-century Italian writer moved between soldiering, government service, and historical reflection. His books and essays made him known as a sharp observer of war, society, and the changing fortunes of the Bourbon kingdom.
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