Book contents
- Three Faces of Sun Tzu
- Frontispiece
- Three Faces of Sun Tzu
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Author’s Note on Chinese-Language Romanization
- Author’s Note on Chinese Characters
- Author’s Note on Online Annex
- Chronology of Chinese History
- List of Abbreviations for Frequently Cited Works
- Introduction
- Background: Historical and Textual
- Preliminaries
- A Strategist Should Be Calculating
- B Strategist Should Be Cheap
- C Strategist Should Find Advantage
- D Strategist Should Enact Stratagems and Formlessness
- E Strategist Should Make a Situation’s Natural Dynamics Work for Her
- F Strategist Should Have an Accurate Grasp of the Significant Information
- G Strategist Should Manage the Interfaces
- Conclusion
- Index A
- Index B
Preliminaries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 March 2024
- Three Faces of Sun Tzu
- Frontispiece
- Three Faces of Sun Tzu
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Acknowledgments
- Author’s Note on Chinese-Language Romanization
- Author’s Note on Chinese Characters
- Author’s Note on Online Annex
- Chronology of Chinese History
- List of Abbreviations for Frequently Cited Works
- Introduction
- Background: Historical and Textual
- Preliminaries
- A Strategist Should Be Calculating
- B Strategist Should Be Cheap
- C Strategist Should Find Advantage
- D Strategist Should Enact Stratagems and Formlessness
- E Strategist Should Make a Situation’s Natural Dynamics Work for Her
- F Strategist Should Have an Accurate Grasp of the Significant Information
- G Strategist Should Manage the Interfaces
- Conclusion
- Index A
- Index B
Summary
This methodologically oriented chapter starts by defining military concepts: strategy, logistics, tactics, operations. Sun Tzu himself did not distinguish between strategy and tactics, so this is a modern lens on Sun Tzu’s thinking. Next, a standardized five-part format is introduced, to be used to provide uniform structure for the fourteen chapters analyzing fourteen major Sun Tzu themes: (a) list of Sun Tzu passages chosen to illustrate a given theme (just a list, not the passages themselves); (b) Sun Tzu (1) analysis of Sun Tzu’s ideas pertaining to that theme; (c) further Sun Tzu (1) analysis of facets of the given theme that conditions of war and politics in Sun Tzu’s time suggest that Sun Tzu might plausibly have discussed, yet did not discuss; (d) Sun Tzu (2) and (3) "frontiers" of the theme, generalizing Sun Tzu’s relevant ideas in selected Sun Tzu (2) and (3) directions; (e) passages listed in Part (a) (in Griffith’s translation), often with brief commentary . The chapter ends by introducing notational conventions used throughout this study to refer to Griffith verses and passages.
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- Three Faces of Sun TzuAnalyzing Sun Tzu's <i>Art of War</i>, A Manual on Strategy, pp. 47 - 53Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024