Thesis ID: CBB001560712

Info[at]war.mil: Nonlinear Science and the Emergence of Information Age Warfare in the United States Military (2008)

unapi

Lawson, Sean Trevor (Author)


Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Fortun, Michael


Publication Date: 2008
Edition Details: Advisor: Fortun, Michael
Physical Details: 395 pp.
Language: English

This study traces the enlistment of concepts and metaphors from nonlinear science (e.g. chaos and complexity theories) by the U.S. military in its attempts to cope with the perceived demands of new information and communication technologies (ICTs), as well as an emerging post-industrial, "information age." In the last three decades, the U.S. military has increasingly conceived of information gathering, processing, and distribution; knowledge formation; and decision-making--along with the denial of those capabilities to the adversary--as the central activities of a new mode of warfare referred to in this study as "informatic warfare." Over the last thirty years, nonlinear science has played an increasingly important role in the various attempts to theorize informatic warfare, the most recent example of which is the theory of "network-centric warfare" (NCW), which has both shaped and been shaped by U.S. actions on the battlefields of Afghanistan and Iraq. In NCW, the world of the information age is seen as more complex and chaotic; the battlefield as a nonlinear, chaotic space; and enemies as networks that behave like complex adaptive systems. In response, military theorists have increasingly asserted that the U.S. military itself must adopt both the behavioral characteristics (flexibility, adaptability, self-organization), as well as structural characteristics (networked, decentralized, distributed), of a complex adaptive system. Military-specific ICTs, such as those used for Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance (C4ISR), are seen as the key enablers of this "military transformation." Nonlinear science, then, has emerged as a key "node" in the network that is the articulation of informatic warfare, providing a common conceptual grounding for linking military understandings of ICTs, information-driven warfare, and the Information Age. By combining a science studies perspective with a number of concepts from recent rhetorical theory, this study is able to trace the rhetorical, intellectual, and institutional conditions that have allowed for the enlistment of nonlinear science into the service of U.S. military theory. In short, it accounts not only for the uses that military theorists have made of nonlinear science, but for the conditions that have made that use possible in the first place. To accomplish that task, the enlistment of nonlinear science is examined in relation to the longer-term, wider historical role that the sciences in general ix have come to play in the ways that Western militaries have understood the "nature" of warfare; the general requirements for victory in warfare; the relationships among society, technology, and war; the military organization's relationship to the "outside" world; as well as the military organization's understanding of itself, its culture and values, and what it means to be a military professional. In doing so, this study deepens our understanding of the construction of military theories, doctrines, and strategies; the relationship between the military and the sciences in the postwar period; the ways that the sciences are enlisted for various purposes in realms typically considered "outside" the sciences; and finally, the way that recent changes in the U.S. military map onto those larger patterns of social and intellectual change often characterized as "post-industrial" or "postmodern."

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Description On the use of concepts and metaphors from nonlinear science such as chaos and complexity theories by the U.S. military. Cited in Diss. Abstr. Int. A 70/01 (2009). Pub. no. AAT 3342871.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001560712/

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Authors & Contributors
Gordin, Michael D.
Jim Laurier
Krzysztof Dabrowski
Peter E. Davies
Gareth Hector
Krugler, David F.
Journals
Air Power History
Metascience: An International Review Journal for the History, Philosophy and Social Studies of Science
Journal of Contemporary History
American Institute of Physics Conference Proceedings
Publishers
Helion and Company
Osprey Publishing
Georgetown University
University of Chicago Press
Rowman & Littlefield
Palgrave
Concepts
Technology and war; technology and the military
Science and war; science and the military
Cold War
Nuclear weapons; atomic weapons
Vietnam War
Information technology
People
Truman, Harry S.
Stalin, Joseph
Clausewitz, Carl von
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century
20th century, early
19th century
18th century
Places
United States
Soviet Union
Kuwait
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Washington, D. C. (U.S.)
Institutions
United States Air Force (USAF)
United States. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)
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