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"It's Not About the New Ethics of War, It's About Ethics in principle." Talking to the Historian of Philosophy, Arsenia Kumankov, About How to Live, Talk, and Think About War, the New Gazette.
For understandable but unprinted reasons over the past four years, we have focused on thinking about wars — those that have been completed and incomplete, those that have been won and those that have been lost, those who are in these theatres of warfare; the language in which we have been trying to formulate our thoughts on war is a centuries-old tradition — which, of course, need not be known and remembered when you shout out of pain at a momen…
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For understandable but unprinted reasons over the past four years, we have focused on thinking about wars — those that have been completed and incomplete, those that have been won and those that have been lost, those who are in these theatres of warfare; the language in which we have been trying to formulate our thoughts on war is a centuries-old tradition — which, of course, need not be known and remembered when you shout out of pain at a momen…