Is it ever right to target civilians in a time of war? Or do the ends sometimes justify the means? The twentieth century - the age of 'total war' - marked the first time that civilian populations came to be seen as legitimate military targets. At this policy's most terrible extreme came the dropping of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki but it is an issue that remains relevant today with the needs of the 'War on Terror' used to justify the use of drone strikes. In Among the Dead Cities, A.C. Grayling explores these moral issues in all their complexity with a detailed examination of the Allied bombing of German cities during World War 2. Considering the cases for and against the area bombing and the experiences of the bombed and the bombers, Grayling asks: was the targeting of civilians in Germany a crime? Now available in the Bloomsbury Revelations series, the book includes a new afterword by the author considering the issues in light of later conflicts up to the present day
The Living Thoughts of Kierkegaard
W.H. AUDEN
INDIANA UNVERSITY PRESS
OF LIFE AND OTHER WORLDS
AART JURRIAANSE
WORLD UNITY & SERVICE TRUST
Emerson Prospect and Retrospect
PORTE JOEL
HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS/HARPER COLLINS PUBLISHERS LIMITED
Emotion thought and therapy
JOROME NEU
ROUTLEDGE & KEGAN PAUL LTD
Concordia The Roots of European Thought
STEPHEN R. HILL
DUCKWORTH GERALD
BURKE
C.B. MACPHERSON
HILL AND WANG
THE TRIANGULAR PATTERN OF LIFE
DONNA HITZ
PHILOSOPHICAL LIBRARY
THE ROOTS OF PEACE
VIVA EMMONS
A QUEST BOOK
Man God and the Universe
I.K. TAIMNI
THE DAWNING OF THE THEOSOPHICAL MOVEMENT
MICHAEL GOMES
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