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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In four pages this paper examines the just war theory from various scholarly points of view as presented in texts by Mark Evans, Noam Chomsky, and Michael Walzer, with the writer’s own personal perspectives on the topic also included. Four sources are listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGjustwar.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
political philosophers. Simply stated, the just war theory condemns various acts of war and the reasons behind them to be morally wrong and therefore prohibited no matter what the
outcome might be. It is based upon jus ad bellum which is the edict or the right to engage in war and jus in bello which establishes wartime action.
Subsequent conflicts such as the Korean War, the Vietnam War, and U.S. intervention in Afghanistan and Kosovo have been described as just wars by some theorists while others have
disagreed. In the introduction essay for his edited compilation entitled Just War Theory: A Reappraisal, political scientist and United Kingdoms University of York Professor Mark Evans emphasized the importance
of open dialogue regarding just war theory. Evans text examines the theory from all possible vantage points, which is crucial since the concept has gone far away from its
original religious and philosophical intentions that no conditions existed that rendered any war to be just. Evans sequel to Just War Theory is an effort to put the train
of argument and discussion back on appropriate moral track. In his essay, Evans (2005) acknowledges that most just war theory advocates base their assumptions and conclusions on the notion
that a supreme emergency provides a justification for war. He considers the ambiguity of an approach to justice for which, "There are right and wrong answers to the moral
questions it poses" (Evans, 2005, p . 8). Evans prefers to take a middle-of-the-road approach to just war theory, unlike other political theorists including Noam Chomsky and Michael Walzer.
Chomsky, an internationally renowned linguist and political philosopher has been a longtime critic of American foreign policy. He typically scrutinizes policy wording and openly questions the rationale behind
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