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			SECTION 1
 
			Scope of the Study 
			When the Special Study Group was established in August, 1963, its 
			members were instructed to govern their deliberations in accordance 
			with three principal criteria.
 
			  
			Briefly stated, they were these:  
				
					
					1) military-style 
						objectivity2) avoidance of preconceived value 
						assumptions
 3) inclusion of all relevant areas of theory and data
 
			These guideposts are by no means as obvious as they may appear at 
			first glance, and we believe it necessary to indicate clearly how 
			they were to inform our work.  
			  
			For they express succinctly the 
			limitations of previous "peace studies," and imply the nature of 
			both government and unofficial dissatisfaction with these earlier 
			efforts. It is not our intention here to minimize the significance 
			of the work of our predecessors, or to belittle the quality of their 
			contributions. What we have tried to do, and believe we have done, 
			is extend their scope.  
			  
			We hope that our conclusions may serve in 
			turn as a starting point for still broader and more detailed 
			examinations of every aspect of the problems of transition to peace 
			and of the questions which must be answered before such a transition 
			can be allowed to get under way.  
			 It is a truism that objectivity is more often an intention expressed 
			than an attitude achieved, but the intention - conscious, 
			unambiguous, and constantly self-critical - is a precondition to its 
			achievement.
 
			  
			We believe it no accident that we were charged to use a 
			"military contingency" model for our study, and we owe a 
			considerable debt to the civilian war planning agencies for their 
			pioneering work in the objective examination of the contingencies of 
			nuclear war.  
			  
			There is no such precedent in peace studies. Much of 
			the usefulness of even the most elaborate and carefully reasoned 
			programs for economic conversion to peace, for example, has been vitiated by a wishful eagerness to demonstrate that peace is not 
			only possible, but even cheap or easy.  
			  
			One official report is 
			replete with references to the critical role of "dynamic optimism" 
			on economic developments, and goes on to submit, as evidence, that 
			it "would be hard to imagine that the American people would not 
			respond very positively to an agreed and safeguarded program to 
			substitute an international rule of law and order," etc.  
				
					
					[1]   Another 
			line of argument frequently taken is that disarmament would entail 
			comparatively little disruption of the economy, since it need only 
			be partial; we will deal with this approach later. Yet genuine 
			objectivity in war studies is often criticized as inhuman. As Herman 
			Kahn, the writer on strategic studies best known to the general 
			public, put it: "Critics frequently object to the icy rationality of 
			the Hudson Institute, the Rand Corporation, and other such 
			organizations. I’m always tempted to ask in reply, ’Would you prefer 
			a warm, human error? Do you feel better with a nice emotional 
			mistake?’"    
					[2]   And, as Secretary of Defense 
				Robert S. McNamara has 
			pointed out, in reference to facing up to the possibility of nuclear 
			war, "Some people are afraid even to look over the edge. But in a 
			thermonuclear war we cannot afford any political acrophobia."
					   
					[3]   
			Surely it should be self-evident that this applies equally to the 
			opposite prospect, but so far no one has taken more than a timid 
			glance over the brink of peace.    
					An intention to avoid preconceived value judgments is if anything 
			even more productive of self-delusion. We claim no immunity, as 
			individuals, from this type of bias, but we have made a continuously 
			self-conscious effort to deal with the problems of peace without, 
			for example, considering that a condition of peace is per se "good" 
			or "bad." This has not been easy, but it has been obligatory; to our 
			knowledge, it has not been done before. Previous studies have taken 
			the desirability of peace, the importance of human life, the 
			superiority of democratic institutions, the greatest "good" for the 
			greatest number, the "dignity" of the individual, the desirability 
			of maximum health and longevity, and other such wishful premises as 
			axiomatic values necessary for the justification of a study of peace 
			issues.    
					We have not found them so. We have attempted to apply the 
			standards of physical science to our thinking, the principal 
			characteristic of which is not quantification, as is popularly 
			believed, but that, in Whitehead’s words, "... it ignores all 
			judgments of value; for instance, all esthetic and moral judgments." 
					   
					[4]   Yet it is obvious that any serious investigation of a problem, 
			however "pure," must be informed by some normative standard. In this 
			case it has been simply the survival of human society in general, of 
			American society in particular, and, as a corollary to survival, the 
			stability of this society.  
					It is interesting, we believe, to note that the most dispassionate 
			planners of nuclear strategy also recognize that the stability of 
			society is the one bedrock value that cannot be avoided. Secretary McNamara has defended the need for American nuclear superiority on 
			the grounds that it "makes possible a strategy designed to preserve 
			the fabric of our societies if war should occur."
   
					[5]   A former 
			member of the Department of State policy planning staff goes 
			further.  
						
						"A more precise word for peace, in terms of the practical 
			world, is stability... Today the great nuclear panoplies are 
			essential elements in such stability as exists. Our present purpose 
			must be to continue the process of learning how to live with them." 
						 
					[6]   We, of course, do not equate stability with peace, but we accept 
			it as the one common assumed objective of both peace and war. 
					 
			The third criterion - breadth - has taken us still farther afield 
			from peace studies made to date. 
			  
			It is obvious to any layman that 
			the economic patterns of a warless world will be drastically 
			different from those we live with today, and it is equally obvious 
			that the political relationships of nations will not be those we 
			have learned to take for granted, sometimes described as a global 
			version of the adversary system of our common law.  
			  
			But the social 
			implications of peace extend far beyond its putative effects on 
			national economies and international relations. As we shall show, 
			the relevance of peace and war to the internal political 
			organization of societies, to the sociological relationships of 
			their members, to psychological motivations, to ecological 
			processes, and to cultural values is equally profound. More 
			important, it is equally critical in assaying the consequences of a 
			transition to peace, and in determining the feasibility of any 
			transition at all. 
 It is not surprising that these less obvious factors have been 
			generally ignored in peace research.
 
			  
			They have not lent themselves 
			to systematic analysis. They have been difficult, perhaps 
			impossible, to measure with any degree of assurance that estimates 
			of their effects could be depended on. They are "intangibles," but 
			only in the sense that abstract concepts in mathematics are 
			intangible compared to those which can be measured, at least 
			superficially; and international relationships can be verbalized, 
			like law, into logical sequences. 
 We do not claim that we have discovered an infallible way of 
			measuring these other factors, or of assigning them precise weights 
			in the equation of transition.
 
			  
			But we believe we have taken their 
			relative importance into account to this extent: we have removed 
			them from the category of the "intangible," hence scientifically 
			suspect and therefore somehow of secondary importance, and brought 
			them out into the realm of the objective. The result, we believe, 
			provides a context of realism for the discussion of the issues 
			relating to the possible transition to peace which up to now has 
			been missing. 
 This is not to say that we presume to have found the answers we were 
			seeking.
 
			  
			But we believe that our emphasis on breadth of scope has 
			made it at least possible to begin to understand the questions.  
			  
			
			
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