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The Art of War

The Art of War

List Price: $23.00
Your Price: $23.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: ART OF WAR
Review: If you are interested in strategy for business, sports, or other situations in life, then you may want to pick this book up. It takes some will power to read this book because the first half of the book is a history of the author and how the writings have been passed down through the years. I recommend this book to someone with time on his or her hands and am interested in strategy situations.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Applies to many, many, aspects of life
Review: This book should be required reading in high school imho. It applies to many many aspects of life, including the business world, sports, personal interactions in general (e.g., how to spot & avoid confidence games), etc. The messages conveyed can be rather deep, and their full meaning may not 'hit home' for a while, but actually imho that's part of what makes this book so special.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: My thoughts on the Art of War
Review: The Art Of War has been really interesting, because it makes you think and try to understand the book because of the terms the author uses in it. I felt that the book has a little too much of fighting tactics, it should have been added with action and drama, rather then having the energy of a textbook.
This book is amazing because of how long the records lasted of it being written at about 400 ad, and ascribed onto bamboo. Then lasting to the paper era and being abridged onto that.
I feel that this book would help a General in an army, or someone that would like to learn on ancient chinese tactics, and how it work's on the enemy.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: this is an overall, alright book
Review: I had to read this book for a class. If I would have picked up this book to read on my own, I probably would have stopped about 2 pages into it. The introduction lasts for half of the book and it is hard to understand in some places. However the strategies this book teaches you are very good and can be very usefull. I wouldnt recommend this book to someone looking for a book to read for pleasure, I think that this book would be most efficient if it was to be taught in a class, than read personally.Overall I liked the book, and if your looking to get ahead in life, i suggest you read it too.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Art of War
Review: This book would be good to read if you are looking to learn something. If you are just pleasure reading, this would be a book to stay away from. "The Art of War", is basicly a text on how to fight a war in ancient Chinese times. Many of it's teachings can be applyed to our world today. It can give you an edge in sports, business, and actial war.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Informative
Review: The Art of War is a factual book on strategies for war, written in the times of ancient China. Being like a history book, there is no core story that connects the chapters together. After the introduction that is about 1/3 of the book, it goes into the "tips" for war. It has one or two lines for a tip, then tells a story of how the tip was used. After a while, it can get very dull and repetitive, so I give it 2 stars. I would recommend this book to people in the military, but to anyone else it wouldn't be very useful or interesting.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Comments on Samuel B. Griffith(intro) version
Review: I won't talk about how good Sun Tzu is, as you probably already know. Instead, I'll share my opinion on how good this translation is.
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1. Is the translation consistent with the Original?
I have not read the entire book in details to assess all the chapters. However, as the first sample page clearly shown, "Therefore appraise it in terms of the five fundamental factors and make comparisons of the seven elements later named.", the translator has indeed taken some liberty in translating Sun Tzu Art of War. "xiao zhi yi ji" indeed refers to the seven estimate (ji) later, but nowhere in the original text was "seven" mentioned. This sounds picky, but from this example you can tell that the tranlation focus more on the meaning rather than maintaining direct translation.

2. Elegance of the translation?
Sun Tzu is actually a great Chinese literary work, it uses antithesis, rhythm, and other techiques to convey meanings. As indicated above, this translation focus more on meaning, you do not get a feeling of what the original text is like. Of course this is not a major problem for most people, as they read Sun Tzu for the content only. In sum, it's readable but rather plain.

3. Format of the book?
This version contains some commentary of Chinese scholars, the format goes something like this: several Sun Tzu's sentences-> commentary-> footnotes-> repeat. That might be helpful to some people, as the scholars expand and help explaining on Sun Tzu's text. However it's kind of annoying if you just want to read Sun Tzu without the bothersome additional interpretion. I suggest you to see Amazon.com's sample page to determine whether you like the format or not.

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Overall, the translation seems to be ok. I do not agree on all of the interpretation from this book, but there are no major mistakes.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Broadening Your Perspective
Review: War is not really based on honor... or glory, or even whose right. It's all about conditions, who has the advantage and how to dishearten your opponents while making sure your own resources are protected. It tells you what to look for through hundreds of various quotes and snippets of advice. This book was not entirely by Sun Tzu, but a collection of famous tacticians through-out history. Each seem to add another element to the concept of how to win in conflict.

In life, you can see a little of this in each day... but just remember not too get too carried away. After all, even Sun Tzu himself said 'A battle not fought, is a battle won.' For broadening your perspective, I'd suggest adding this book to your collection as well as 'Open Your Mind, Open Your Life: A Book of Eastern Wisdom' by Taro Gold.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: First Read The Art, Then Add The Philosophy
Review: This book is a classic. When you read it, you will know why. It's everything you ever wanted to know about the art of war and leadership. For the philosophy behind all of this good stuff, I ended up reading "West Point" by Norman Thomas Remick, because it was the easiest to understand.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Ancient wisdom well translated.
Review: I am at a loss as how to review this book. Having a background (i.e. a BA) in history, I was reading it as an historical text, and not a guide as to how to run a business. However, since a hammer can crack a coconut as well as drive nails, I think I will progress. Secondly, and separately, there is an old adage that says, "Plato is easier to understand than the Platonists," which illustrates the idea that these old texts, unlike the commentators on the texts, are not mysterious or esoteric, but quite easy to understand.

I think out the outset, an understanding of "TAO," and its supplementary doctrine of "mandate of heaven" need to be clarified. "Tao," in a word means the "Way," or the proper course of things. It is roughly equivalent to the Greek "Zoe," which means the correct and proper lifestyle. The idea is living one's life in accordance to the morality of the universe. In the Anglo-Saxon tradition we call this "Natural Law." The idea of "Tao," and all of these, is to bring one in accordance, or "at one," with the moral force of the universe.

That "at-one-ment" with the universal morality is the key to a leader's power, whereby he would have "the mandate of heaven." This is the Asian equivalent of "the divine right of kings." The idea was in doing the proper thing in the proper to achieve success.

Sun-tzu's philosophy is supple. As a contrast, Sun-tzu is the exact opposite of General William Tecumseh Sherman. Sun-tzu embodies that Asian patience and restraint that we all admire, while Sherman was more or less a Rambo on speed. It is, odd, therefore that so many business men would find the good Chinese general's philosophy so appealing, since it runs counter to current cooperate culture-back stabbing, "more, more-faster, faster!," and human sacrifices to the Almighty Dollar. If this book can restrain some of the out of control Enron greed, then it is worth the trouble of reading.

If anything, this book is novel in that it provides a "softer" approach to war, or anything else. Sun-tzu advocates strategy, disinformation as a tool, and the rather novel idea that you use an army as a last resort. But if the army is to be use, fight the battle quickly, severely, and with full force. This is a lesson I hope the Department of Defense is heeding, since in our current war on terrorism, the world is in the balance.

This translation is readable, and it includes the ancient commentaries on Sun-tzu's work, since I think it is crucial that we understand the work as the ancients understood things. C. S. Lewis in his book "God in the Dock," has an essay entitled "On Reading Old Books," where he points out that each age has its own assumptions and presuppositions about things, and that it is in the area of these assumptions that the real intellectual work takes place.

The introductory chapters are priceless, and put the book in its historical context-past, present, and future. The section on Mao's and the Soviet's use of this book was quite interesting. This edition also has Wu chi's "Art of War," which is more of a Taoist approach to war, and includes religious practices, such as divining. It provides an excellent counterpoint to Sun-tzu's work.

I would recommend reading this book with Lao-tze's "Tao Te Ching," Confucius's "Analects," and Machiavelli's "The Prince." The first two books help round out Asian culture, religion, and philosophy that are indispensable for getting the subtleties and details of "The Art of War." "The Prince" is included, because fighting a war and maintaining a state are two totally different projects. Take Alexander the Great as the greatest example: he conquered the land from Macedonia to India, but after his death, his empire split into three kingdoms. Machiavelli illustrates some techniques for maintaining a state. Actually, for a really interesting book on success, and how to be successful AND moral, I would recommend the humble "Book of Proverbs" conveniently found in you Bible. Proverbs is ancient wisdom, like "Art of War," or Tao Te Ching," but we frequently for get it, since familiarity breeds contempt!

In the final analysis, a book is only good insofar as it opens up your mind and causes you to reevaluate things, which this book does.


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