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Stratégie, les 33 lois de la guerre (2006)

par Robert Greene

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1,352913,891 (4.05)2
As in his bestselling The 48 Laws of Power, Greene puts a modern spin on wisdom that has stood the test of history, only this time his role model is Sun Tzu rather than Machiavelli. The argument is fairly standard: despite our most noble intentions, "aggressive impulses that are impossible to ignore or repress" make military combat a fitting metaphor for getting ahead in life. Greene's advice covers everything from steeling one's mind for battle to specific defensive and offensive tactics -- notably, the final section on "dirty" warfare is one of the book's longest. Historical lessons are outlined and interpreted, with amplifying quotations crammed into the margins. Not all of the examples are drawn from the battlefield; in one section, Greene skips nimbly from Lyndon Johnson's tenacity to Julius Caesar's decisiveness, from Joan Crawford's refusal to compromise to Ted Williams's competitive drive. Alfred Hitchcock, he says, embodies "the detached-Buddha tactic" of appearing uninvolved while remaining in total control. The diversity of subject matter compensates for occasional lapses into stilted warriorese ("arm yourself with prudence, and never completely lay down your arms, not even for friends"). -- from http://www.amazon.com (June 22, 2011).… (plus d'informations)
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Affichage de 1-5 de 9 (suivant | tout afficher)
I liked this book; not fabulous, but I did like it. I have many of the books on war (Machiavelli's [book: The Prince], [book: Moltke on the Art of War], [author: Sun Tzu]'s classic, Alexander the Great's version, some from Napoleon, some Civil War writings, etc.) and this is a conglomeration of many of those I'm familiar with.

Having said that, the style gets tiresome after a while. Many of the best parts are the sidebars where the author quotes directly from some of the best in war theory and war stories. Perhaps I shouldn't have tried to read it all at once but perhaps a chapter a week. As it was, it took me many months to get through.

Things I learned: Many of the things I learned were better found in Machiavelli, Alexander and Napoleon. Echos of things I already knew. Still, it is nice to have all of this in one volume. I suppose I could have done without the ever-present quotes from "I Ching" and such. ( )
  Jeffrey_G | Nov 22, 2022 |
Contents

Preface
Part I Self-directed warfare
1 Declare war on your enemies: The polarity strategy
2 Do not fight the last war: The guerrilla war of the mind strategy
3 Amidst the turmil of events, do not lose your presence of mind: The counterbalance strategy
4 Create a sense of urgency and desperation: The death-ground strategy
Part II Organizational (tam_ warfare
5 Avoid the snares of groupthink: The command-and-control strategy
6 Segment your forces: The controlled-chaos strategy
7 Transform your war into a crusade: Morale strategies
Part III Defensive warfare
8 Pick your battles carefully: The perfect economy strategy
9 Turn the tables: The counterattack strategy
10 Create a threatening presence: Deterrence strategies
11 Trade space for time: The nonengagement strategy
Part IV Offensive warfare
12 Lose battles but win the war: Grand strategy
13 Know your enemy: The intelligence strategy
14 Overwhelm resistance with speed and suddenness: The blitzkrieg strategy
15 Control the dynamic: Forcing strategies
16 Hit them where it hurts: The center-of-gravity strategy
17 Defeat them in detail: The divide-and-conquer strategy
18 Expose and attack your opponent's soft flank: The turning strategy
19 Envelop the enemy: The annihilation strategy
20 Maneuver them into weakness: The ripening for the sickle strategy
21 Negotiate while advancing: The diplomatic war strategy
22 Know how to end things: The exit strategy
Part V Unconventional (dirty) warfare
23 Weave a seamless blend of fact and fiction: Misperception strategies
24 Take the line of least expectation: The ordinary-extraordinary strategy
25 Occupy the moral high-ground: The righteous strategy
26 Deny them targets: The strategy of the void
27 Seem to work for the interests of others while furthering your own: The alliance strategy
28 Give your rivals enough rope to hang themselves: The one-upmanship strategy
29 Take small bites: The fait accompli strategy
30 Penetrate their minds: Communication strategies
31 Destroy from within: The inner-front strategy
32 Dominate while seeming to submit: The passive aggression strategy
33 Sow uncertainty and panic through acts of terror: The chain-reaction strategy
Selected bibliography
Index
  AikiBib | Aug 14, 2022 |
Psychopathy 101. Self help book for managers, as vapid as any other self help book. Better researched than most but that does not translate into value. ( )
  Paul_S | Dec 23, 2020 |
I love Robert Greene’s books usually but this one was just OK. Too many strategies; too many leaders, too many wars. ( )
  joyfulmimi | Sep 18, 2020 |
Could have added another strategy to team warfare based on the battles of Xiang Yu vs Liu Bang. ( )
  Wendy_Wang | Sep 28, 2019 |
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In the spring of 401 B.C., Xenophon, a thirty-year-old country gentleman who lived outside Athens, received an intriguing invitation: a friend was recruiting Greek soldiers to fight as mercenaries for Cyrus, brother of the Persian king Ataxerxes, and asked him to go along.
War, or any kind of conflict, is waged and won through strategy. (introduction for Part I)
We live in a culture that promotes democratic values of being fair to one and all, the importance of fitting into a group, and knowing how to cooperate with other people. (Preface)
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As in his bestselling The 48 Laws of Power, Greene puts a modern spin on wisdom that has stood the test of history, only this time his role model is Sun Tzu rather than Machiavelli. The argument is fairly standard: despite our most noble intentions, "aggressive impulses that are impossible to ignore or repress" make military combat a fitting metaphor for getting ahead in life. Greene's advice covers everything from steeling one's mind for battle to specific defensive and offensive tactics -- notably, the final section on "dirty" warfare is one of the book's longest. Historical lessons are outlined and interpreted, with amplifying quotations crammed into the margins. Not all of the examples are drawn from the battlefield; in one section, Greene skips nimbly from Lyndon Johnson's tenacity to Julius Caesar's decisiveness, from Joan Crawford's refusal to compromise to Ted Williams's competitive drive. Alfred Hitchcock, he says, embodies "the detached-Buddha tactic" of appearing uninvolved while remaining in total control. The diversity of subject matter compensates for occasional lapses into stilted warriorese ("arm yourself with prudence, and never completely lay down your arms, not even for friends"). -- from http://www.amazon.com (June 22, 2011).

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