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ID092036
Title ProperUnderstanding man, the state, and war
LanguageENG
AuthorSuganami, Hidemi
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article expounds and assesses the key contentions of Man, the State, and War. It notes that the book contains meta-theoretical and theoretical components. Through a close re-examination of the text, the article shows how Waltz arrives at his third-image conclusion, reveals a number of errors of a conceptual or logical nature in the meta-theoretical moves that lead him to this conclusion, and explains how such errors are partly rooted in a deeper issue that the book addresses - how to integrate the three images (or three contending estimates of the major cause of war) into one overarching image of world politics based on the agent/structure dichotomy and the distinction between macro and micro enquiries. The article goes on to outline Waltz's substantive theory of international politics, found in an embryonic form in Man, the State, and War, speculates on the sources of the book's success, and assesses its main significance.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Relations Vol. 23, No. 3; Sep 2009: p.372-388
Journal SourceInternational Relations Vol. 23, No. 3; Sep 2009: p.372-388
Key WordsAgent ;  Causes ;  Levels ;  Man ;  The State ;  War ;  Structure ;  Kenneth Waltz