ECONOMIC%20EFFECTS%20OF%20EXCHANGE%20RATE%20CHANGES%20IN%20THE%20GLOBALIZATION%20PROCESS
In: Social sciences studies journal: SSS journal, Band 4, Heft 24, S. 4861-4871
ISSN: 2587-1587
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In: Social sciences studies journal: SSS journal, Band 4, Heft 24, S. 4861-4871
ISSN: 2587-1587
In: Journal of business communication: JBC, Band 21, Heft 2, S. 45-53
ISSN: 1552-4582
In: Itinerario: international journal on the history of European expansion and global interaction, Band 1, Heft 3-4, S. 38-39
ISSN: 2041-2827
In: Africa research bulletin. Economic, financial and technical series, Band 55, Heft 7
ISSN: 1467-6346
In: New African: the bestselling pan-African magazine, Heft 205, S. 55-70
ISSN: 0140-833X, 0142-9345
World Affairs Online
World Affairs Online
In: State Government: journal of state affairs, S. 3-4
ISSN: 0039-0097
In: Telos: critical theory of the contemporary, Band 1976, Heft 30, S. 116-126
ISSN: 1940-459X
In: Telos, Band 30, S. 116-126
ISSN: 0040-2842, 0090-6514
The various formulae which have been applied to WWI can be understood as attempts to fit it into nineteenth century categories, which assume that peace is a natural state of affairs. The actual revolutionary side in that war was Bismarckian Germany, in which the realities of the new scientific era were best approximated by social institutions. The military apparatus of Germany was the weak point of the system, hypnotized by traditional concepts, schemes, & goals. The war was against the Western status quo. The energy transformation of the world necessarily occurs through war, which is the most intense means of rapidly releasing accumulated forces. The frontline experience was fundamental to the new image of the world. In this experience, death was a continuous presence. This experience has been denied by later developments, leaving the world in a state of war-generating peace rather than in the real peace which might emerge from genuine understanding of the war experience. W. H. Stoddard.