The art of war

 The Art of War (Chinese: 孫子兵法; lit. 'Sun Tzu's Military Method') is an ancient Chinese military treatise dating from the Late Spring and Autumn Period (roughly 5th century BC). The work, which is attributed to the ancient Chinese military strategist Sun Tzu ("Master Sun"), is composed of 13 chapters. Each one is devoted to a different set of skills (or "art") related to warfare and how it applies to military strategy and tactics. For almost 1,500 years it was the lead text in an anthology that was formalized as the Seven Military Classicsby Emperor Shenzong of Song in 1080. The Art of War remains the most influential strategy text in East Asian warfare[1] and has influenced both Far Eastern and Western military thinking, business tactics, legal strategy, lifestyles and beyond.

The Art of War
Bamboo book - closed - UCR.jpg
Author(trad.) Sun Tzu
CountryChina
LanguageClassical Chinese
SubjectMilitary art
Publication date
5th century BC
TextThe Art of War at Wikisource
The Art of War
Traditional Chinese孫子兵法
Simplified Chinese孙子兵法
Literal meaning"Master Sun's Military Methods"

The book contains a detailed explanation and analysis of the 5th-century BC Chinese military, from weapons and strategy to rank and discipline. Sun also stressed the importance of intelligence operatives and espionage to the war effort. Considered one of history's finest military tacticians and analysts, his teachings and strategies formed the basis of advanced military training for millennia to come.

The book was translated into French and published in 1772 (re-published in 1782) by the French Jesuit Jean Joseph Marie Amiot. A partial translation into English was attempted by British officer Everard Ferguson Calthrop in 1905 under the title The Book of War. The first annotated English translation was completed and published by Lionel Giles in 1910.[2] Military and political leaders such as the Chinese communist revolutionary Mao Zedong, Japanese daimyō Takeda Shingen, Vietnamese general Võ Nguyên Giáp, and American military general Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. are all cited as having drawn inspiration from the book.[3]

HistoryEdit

Text and commentariesEdit

The Art of War is traditionally attributed to an ancient Chinese military general known as Sun Tzu (now Romanized "Sunzi") meaning "Master Sun". Sun Tzu was traditionally said to have lived in the 6th century BC, but The Art of War's earliest parts probably date to at least 100 years later.[4]

Sima Qian's Records of the Grand Historian, the first of China's 24 dynastic histories, records an early Chinese tradition that a text on military matters was written by one "Sun Wu" (孫武) from the State of Qi, and that this text had been read and studied by King Helü of Wu (r. 514 BC – 495 BC).[5] This text was traditionally identified with the received Master Sun's Art of War. The conventional view was that Sun Wu was a military theorist from the end of the Spring and Autumn period(776–471 BC) who fled his home state of Qi to the southeastern kingdom of Wu, where he is said to have impressed the king with his ability to train even "dainty palace ladies" in warfare and to have made Wu's armies powerful enough to challenge their western rivals in the state of Chu. This view is still widely held in China.[6]

The strategist, poet, and warlord Cao Cao in the early 3rd century AD authored the earliest known commentary to the Art of War.[5] Cao's preface makes clear that he edited the text and removed certain passages, but the extent of his changes were unclear historically.[5] The Art of War appears throughout the bibliographical catalogs of the Chinese dynastic histories, but listings of its divisions and size varied widely.[5]

AuthorshipEdit

Beginning around the 12th century, some Chinese scholars began to doubt the historical existence of Sun Tzu, primarily on the grounds that he is not mentioned in the historical classic The Commentary of Zuo (Zuo Zhuan), which mentions most of the notable figures from the Spring and Autumn period.[5] The name "Sun Wu" (孫武) does not appear in any text prior to the Records of the Grand Historian,[7] and has been suspected to be a made-up descriptive cognomen meaning "the fugitive warrior", glossing the surname "Sun" as the related term "fugitive" (xùn ), while "Wu" is the ancient Chinese virtue of "martial, valiant" ( ), which corresponds to Sunzi's role as the hero's doppelgänger in the story of Wu Zixu.[8] In the early 20th century, the Chinese writer and reformer Liang Qichaotheorized that the text was actually written in the 4th century BC by Sun Tzu's purported descendant Sun Bin, as a number of historical sources mention a military treatise he wrote.[5] Unlike Sun Wu, Sun Bin appears to have been an actual person who was a genuine authority on military matters, and may have been the inspiration for the creation of the historical figure "Sun Tzu" through a form of euhemerism.[8]

In 1972, the Yinqueshan Han slips were discovered in two Han dynasty (206 BC – 220 AD) tombs near the city of Linyi in Shandong Province.[9] Among the many bamboo slipwritings contained in the tombs, which had been sealed between 134 and 118  BC, respectively were two separate texts, one attributed to "Sun Tzu", corresponding to the received text, and another attributed to Sun Bin, which explains and expands upon the earlier The Art of War by Sunzi.[10] The Sun Bin text's material overlaps with much of the "Sun Tzu" text, and the two may be "a single, continuously developing intellectual tradition united under the Sun name".[11] This discovery showed that much of the historical confusion was due to the fact that there were two texts that could have been referred to as "Master Sun's Art of War", not one.[10] The content of the earlier text is about one-third of the chapters of the modern The Art of War, and their text matches very closely.[9] It is now generally accepted that the earlier The Art of War was completed sometime between 500 and 430 BC.[10]

The 13 chaptersEdit

The Art of War is divided into 13 chapters (or piān); the collection is referred to as being one zhuàn ("whole" or alternatively "chronicle").

The Art of War chapter names and contents
ChapterLionel Giles(1910)[12]R. L. Wing (1988)Ralph D. Sawyer (1996)Chow-Hou Wee (2003)Michael Nylan (2020)Contents
ILaying PlansThe CalculationsInitial Estimations
  • Detail Assessment and Planning
  • (Chinese: 始計)
First CalculationsExplores the five fundamental factors (the Way, seasons, terrain, leadership, and management) and seven elements that determine the outcomes of military engagements. By thinking, assessing and comparing these points, a commander can calculate his chances of victory. Habitual deviation from these calculations will ensure failure via improper action. The text stresses that war is a very grave matter for the state and must not be commenced without due consideration.
IIWaging WarThe ChallengeWaging War
  • Waging War
  • (Chinese: 作戰)
Initiating BattleExplains how to understand the economy of warfare and how success requires winning decisive engagements quickly. This section advises that successful military campaigns require limiting the cost of competition and conflict.
IIIAttack by StratagemThe Plan of AttackPlanning Offensives
  • Strategic Attack
  • (Chinese: 謀攻)
Planning an AttackDefines the source of strength as unity, not size, and discusses the five factors that are needed to succeed in any war. In order of importance, these critical factors are: Attack, Strategy, Alliances, Army and Cities.
IVTactical DispositionsPositioningMilitary Disposition
  • Disposition of the Army
  • (Chinese: 軍形)
Forms to PerceiveExplains the importance of defending existing positions until a commander is capable of advancing from those positions in safety. It teaches commanders the importance of recognizing strategic opportunities, and teaches not to create opportunities for the enemy.
VUse of EnergyDirectingStrategic Military Power
  • Forces
  • (Chinese: 兵勢)
The Disposition of PowerExplains the use of creativity and timing in building an army's momentum.
VIWeak Points and StrongIllusion and RealityVacuity and Substance
  • Weaknesses and Strengths
  • (Chinese: 虛實)
Weak and StrongExplains how an army's opportunities come from the openings in the environment caused by the relative weakness of the enemy and how to respond to changes in the fluid battlefield over a given area.
VIIManeuvering an ArmyEngaging The ForceMilitary Combat
  • Military Maneuvers
  • (Chinese: 軍爭)
Contending ArmiesExplains the dangers of direct conflict and how to win those confrontations when they are forced upon the commander.
VIIIVariation of TacticsThe Nine VariationsNine Changes
  • Variations and Adaptability
  • (Chinese: 九變)
Nine ContingenciesFocuses on the need for flexibility in an army's responses. It explains how to respond to shifting circumstances successfully.
IXThe Army on the MarchMoving The ForceManeuvering the Army
  • Movement and Development of Troops
  • (Chinese: 行軍)
Fielding the ArmyDescribes the different situations in which an army finds itself as it moves through new enemy territories, and how to respond to these situations. Much of this section focuses on evaluating the intentions of others.
XClassification of TerrainSituational PositioningConfigurations of Terrain
  • Terrain
  • (Chinese: 地形)
Conformations of the LandsLooks at the three general areas of resistance (distance, dangers and barriers) and the six types of ground positions that arise from them. Each of these six field positions offers certain advantages and disadvantages.
XIThe Nine SituationsThe Nine SituationsNine Terrains
  • The Nine Battlegrounds
  • (Chinese: 九地)
Nine Kinds of GroundDescribes the nine common situations (or stages) in a campaign, from scattering to deadly, and the specific focus that a commander will need in order to successfully navigate them.
XIIAttack by FireThe Fiery AttackIncendiary Attacks
  • Attacking with Fire
  • (Chinese: 火攻)
Attacks with FireExplains the general use of weapons and the specific use of the environment as a weapon. This section examines the five targets for attack, the five types of environmental attack and the appropriate responses to such attacks.
XIIIUse of SpiesThe Use of IntelligenceEmploying Spies
  • Intelligence and Espionage
  • (Chinese: 用間)
Using SpiesFocuses on the importance of developing good information sources, and specifies the five types of intelligence sources and how to best manage each of them.

Cultural influenceEdit

The beginning of The Art of War in a classical bamboo book from the reign of the Qianlong Emperor

Military and intelligence applicationsEdit

Across East AsiaThe Art of War was part of the syllabus for potential candidates of military service examinations.

During the Sengoku period (c. 1467–1568), the Japanese daimyō Takeda Shingen (1521–1573) is said to have become almost invincible in all battles without relying on guns, because he studied The Art of War.[13] The book even gave him the inspiration for his famous battle standard "Fūrinkazan" (Wind, Forest, Fire and Mountain), meaning fast as the wind, silent as a forest, ferocious as fire and immovable as a mountain.

The translator Samuel B. Griffith offers a chapter on "Sun Tzu and Mao Tse-Tung" where The Art of War is cited as influencing Mao's On Guerrilla WarfareOn the Protracted Warand Strategic Problems of China's Revolutionary War, and includes Mao's quote: "We must not belittle the saying in the book of Sun Wu Tzu, the great military expert of ancient China, 'Know your enemy and know yourself and you can fight a thousand battles without disaster.'"[13]

During the Vietnam War, some Vietcongofficers extensively studied The Art of Warand reportedly could recite entire passages from memory. General Võ Nguyên Giápsuccessfully implemented tactics described in The Art of War during the Battle of Dien Bien Phu ending major French involvement in Indochina and leading to the accords which partitioned Vietnam into North and South. General Võ, later the main PVA military commander in the Vietnam War, was an avid student and practitioner of Sun Tzu's ideas.[14]America's defeat there, more than any other event, brought Sun Tzu to the attention of leaders of U.S. military theory.[14][15][16]

The Department of the Army in the United States, through its Command and General Staff College, lists The Art of War as one example of a book that may be kept at a military unit's library.[17]

The Art of War is listed on the Marine Corps Professional Reading Program (formerly known as the Commandant's Reading List). It is recommended reading for all United States Military Intelligence personnel.[18]

The Art of War is used as instructional material at the US Military Academy at West Point, in the course Military Strategy (470),[19]and it is also recommended reading for Officer cadets at the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst. Some notable military leaders have stated the following about Sun Tzu and The Art of War:

"I always kept a copy of The Art of War on my desk."[20] – General Douglas MacArthur5 Star General & Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers.

"I have read The Art of War by Sun Tzu. He continues to influence both soldiers & politicians."[21] – General Colin PowellChairman of the Joint Chiefs of StaffNational Security Advisor, and Secretary of State.

According to some authors, the strategy of deception from The Art of War was studied and widely used by the KGB: "I will force the enemy to take our strength for weakness, and our weakness for strength, and thus will turn his strength into weakness".[22] The book is widely cited by KGB officers in charge of disinformation operations in Vladimir Volkoff's novel Le Montage.

Finnish Field Marshal Mannerheim and general Aksel Airo were avid readers of Art of War; Airo kept the book on his bedside table in his quarters.[citation needed]

Application outside the militaryEdit

The Art of War has been applied to many fields outside of the military. Much of the text is about how to outsmart one's opponent without actually having to engage in physical battle. As such, it has found application as a training guide for many competitive endeavors that do not involve actual combat.

The Art of War is mentioned as an influence in the earliest known Chinese collection of stories about fraud (mostly in the realm of commerce), Zhang Yingyu's The Book of Swindles (Du pian xin shu杜騙新書c. 1617), which dates to the late Ming dynasty.[23]

Many business books have applied the lessons taken from the book to office politicsand corporate business strategy.[24][25][26]Many Japanese companies make the book required reading for their key executives.[27]The book is also popular among Western business circles citing its utilitarian values regarding management practices. Many entrepreneurs and corporate executives have turned to it for inspiration and advice on how to succeed in competitive business situations. The book has also been applied to the field of education.[28]

The Art of War has been the subject of legal books[29] and legal articles on the trial process, including negotiation tactics and trial strategy.[30][31][32][33]

The book The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene employs philosophies covered in The Art of War.[34]

The Art of War has also been applied in sports. National Football League coach Bill Belichick, record holder of the most Super Bowl wins in history, has stated on multiple occasions his admiration for The Art of War.[35][36] Brazilian association footballcoach Luiz Felipe Scolari actively used The Art of War for Brazil's successful 2002 World Cup campaign. During the tournament Scolari put passages of The Art of War underneath his players' doors in the night.[37][38]

The Art of War is often quoted while developing tactics and/or strategy in esports. "Play To Win" by David Sirlin analyses applications of the ideas from The Art of Warin modern esports. The Art of War was released in 2014 as an e-book companion alongside the Art of War DLC for Europa Universalis IV, a PC strategy game by Paradox Development Studios, with a foreword by Thomas Johansson.

Film and televisionEdit

The Art of War and Sun Tzu have been referenced and quoted in many movies and television shows, including In the 1987 movie Wall StreetGordon Gekko (Michael Douglas) frequently references it [39] The 20th James Bond film, Die Another Day (2002) also references The Art of War as the spiritual guide shared by Colonel Moon and his father.[40] and in The Sopranos. In season 3, episode 8 ("He Is Risen"), Dr. Melfi suggests to Tony Soprano that he read the book.[41] and the Star Trek: The Next Generation first-season episode "The Last Outpost", William Riker quotes The Art of War to Captain Picard, who expressed pleasure that Sun Tzu was still taught at Starfleet Academy. Later in the episode, a survivor from a long-dead nonhuman empire noted common aspects between his own people's wisdom and The Art of War with regard to knowing when and when not to fight.[citation needed]

The Art of War is a 2000 action spy film directed by Christian Duguay and starring Wesley SnipesMichael BiehnAnne Archerand Donald Sutherland.[42]

Note

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article
 Metasyntactic variable, which is released under the 
Creative Commons
Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
.