ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1966. The main purpose of this book is not philosophical speculation, but to draw the obvious conclusions from political and historical facts about the prospects and methods of human political survival. The central theme is developed in the context of problems which cause most anxiety today: the mounting arms race, the unstable balance of power, the rapid growth of population, racial conflicts and ideological incompatibilities.

chapter |4 pages

HARRIS

chapter |1 pages

CONTENTS

chapter |1 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter I|13 pages

CHAPTER I

part |1 pages

PART I THE STATE AND WAR

chapter |19 pages

CHAPTER

chapter IV|12 pages

CHAPTER IV

chapter V|19 pages

CHAPTER V

It is fairly obvious at the very outset that International Law does

chapter VI|14 pages

CHAPTER VI

chapter VII|12 pages

CHAPTER VII

chapter |12 pages

CHAPTER

chapter IX|19 pages

CHAPTER IX

chapter X|22 pages

CHAPTER X

chapter |4 pages

ofU Thant,

part |1 pages

PART THE CONDITIONS OF PEACE

chapter XI|12 pages

The Myth of National Self-Determination

chapter 12|27 pages

Philosophical Principles of

chapter XIV|11 pages

Conditions of World Community

chapter XV|13 pages

CHAPTER XV

part |1 pages

PART III THE IDEOLOGICAL CONFLICT

chapter XVI|1 pages

The Crucial Antithesis

chapter |1 pages

it was slanted in

chapter XVIII|13 pages

CHAPTER XVIII

chapter XIX|20 pages

CHAPTER XIX

chapter |1 pages

CONCLUSION

chapter XX|18 pages

CHAPTER XX

chapter |18 pages

'if of of