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Herman Kahn

Herman Kahn (February 15, 1922 – July 7, 1983) was an American physicist and a founding member of the Hudson Institute, regarded as one of the preeminent futurists of the latter part of the twentieth century. He originally came to prominence as a military strategist and systems theorist while employed at the RAND Corporation. He became known for analyzing the likely consequences of nuclear war and recommending ways to improve survivability during the Cold War. Kahn posited the idea of a "winnable" nuclear exchange in his 1960 book On Thermonuclear War for which he is cited as one of the historical inspirations for the title character of Stanley Kubrick's classic black comedy film satire Dr. Strangelove.[1] In his commentary for Fail Safe, director Sidney Lumet remarked that the Professor Groeteschele character is also based on Herman Kahn.[2] Kahn's theories contributed to the development of the nuclear strategy of the United States.

Herman Kahn
Kahn on May 11, 1965
Born(1922-02-15)February 15, 1922
DiedJuly 7, 1983(1983-07-07) (aged 61)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of California, Los Angeles (BS)
California Institute of Technology (MS)
Occupations
Known forNuclear strategy
Notable workOn Thermonuclear War

Background

Kahn was born in Bayonne, New Jersey, the son of Yetta (née Koslowsky) and Abraham Kahn, a tailor.[3] His parents were Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. He was raised in the Bronx, then in Los Angeles following his parents' divorce.[4] Raised Jewish, he later became an atheist.[5] Kahn graduated from Fairfax High School in 1940 and served in the United States Army during the Burma campaign in World War II in a non-combat capacity as a telephone lineman.[6] He received a Bachelor of Science at UCLA and briefly attended CalTech to complete a doctorate before dropping out with a Master of Science due to financial constraints.[7] He joined the RAND Corporation as a mathematician after being recruited by fellow physicist Samuel Cohen.[8]

Cold War theories

Kahn's major contributions were the several strategies he developed during the Cold War to contemplate "the unthinkable" – namely, nuclear warfare – by using applications of game theory. Kahn is often cited (with Pierre Wack) as a father of scenario planning.[9]

Kahn argued for deterrence and believed that if the Soviet Union believed that the United States had a second strike capability then it would offer greater deterrence, which he wrote in his paper titled "The Nature and Feasibility of War and Deterrence".[10]

The bases of his work were systems theory and game theory as applied to economics and military strategy. Kahn argued that for deterrence to succeed, the Soviet Union had to be convinced that the United States had second-strike capability in order to leave the Politburo in no doubt that even a perfectly coordinated massive attack would guarantee a measure of retaliation that would leave them devastated as well:

At the minimum, an adequate deterrent for the United States must provide an objective basis for a Soviet calculation that would persuade them that, no matter how skillful or ingenious they were, an attack on the United States would lead to a very high risk if not certainty of large-scale destruction to Soviet civil society and military forces.[11]

In 1962, Kahn published a 16-step escalation ladder. By 1965 he had developed this into a 44-step ladder.[12]

  1. Ostensible Crisis
  2. Political, Economic and Diplomatic Gestures
  3. Solemn and Formal Declarations
  4. Hardening of Positions – Confrontation of Wills
  5. Show of Force
  6. Significant Mobilization
  7. "Legal" Harassment – Retortions
  8. Harassing Acts of Violence
  9. Dramatic Military Confrontations
  10. Provocative Breaking off of Diplomatic Relations
  11. Super-Ready Status
  12. Large Conventional War (or Actions)
  13. Large Compound Escalation
  14. Declaration of Limited Conventional War
  15. Barely Nuclear War
  16. Nuclear "Ultimatums"
  17. Limited Evacuations (20%)
  18. Spectacular Show or Demonstration of Force
  19. "Justifiable" Counterforce Attack
  20. "Peaceful" World-Wide Embargo or Blockade
  21. Local Nuclear War – Exemplary
  22. Declaration of Limited Nuclear War
  23. Local Nuclear War – Military
  24. Unusual, Provocative and Significant Countermeasures
  25. Evacuation (70%)
  26. Demonstration Attack on Zone of Interior
  27. Exemplary Attack on Military
  28. Exemplary Attacks Against Property
  29. Exemplary Attacks on Population
  30. Complete Evacuation (95%)
  31. Reciprocal Reprisals
  32. Formal Declaration of "General" War
  33. Slow-Motion Counter-"Property" War
  34. Slow-Motion Counterforce War
  35. Constrained Force-Reduction Salvo
  36. Constrained Disarming Attack
  37. Counterforce-with-Avoidance Attack
  38. Unmodified Counterforce Attack
  39. Slow-Motion Countercity war
  40. Countervalue Salvo
  41. Augmented Disarming Attack
  42. Civilian Devastation Attack
  43. Controlled General War
  44. Spasm/Insensate War

Hudson Institute

In 1961, Kahn, Max Singer and Oscar Ruebhausen founded the Hudson Institute,[13] a think tank initially located in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, where Kahn was living at the time. He recruited sociologist Daniel Bell, political philosopher Raymond Aron and novelist Ralph Ellison (author of the 1952 classic Invisible Man).

The Year 2000

In 1967, Herman Kahn and Anthony J. Wiener published The Year 2000: A Framework for Speculation on the Next Thirty-Three Years, which included contributions from staff members of the Hudson Institute and an introduction by Daniel Bell. Table XVIII in the document[14] contains a list called "One Hundred Technical Innovations Very Likely in the Last Third of the Twentieth Century". The first ten predictions were:

  1. Multiple applications of lasers.
  2. Extreme high-strength structural materials.
  3. New or improved superperformance fabrics.
  4. New or improved materials for equipment and appliances.
  5. New airborne vehicles (Ground-effect vehicles, giant or supersonic jets, VTOL, STOL).
  6. Extensive commercial applications of shaped-charge explosives.
  7. More reliable and longer-range weather forecasting.
  8. Extensive and/or intensive expansion of tropical agriculture and forestry.
  9. New sources of power for fixed installations.
  10. New sources of power for ground transportation.

Later years

In Kahn's view, capitalism and technology held nearly boundless potential for progress, while the colonization of space lay in the near, not the distant, future.[15] Kahn's 1976 book The Next 200 Years, written with William Brown and Leon Martel, presented an optimistic scenario of economic conditions in the year 2176. He also wrote a number of books extrapolating the future of the American, Japanese and Australian economies and several works on systems theory, including the well-received 1957 monograph Techniques of System Analysis.[16]

During the mid-1970s, when South Korea's GDP per capita was one of the lowest in the world, Kahn predicted that the country would become one of the top 10 most powerful countries in the world by the year 2000.[17]

In his last year, 1983, Kahn wrote approvingly of Ronald Reagan's political agenda in The Coming Boom: Economic, Political, and Social and bluntly derided Jonathan Schell's claims about the long-term effects of nuclear war. On July 7 that year, he died of a stroke, aged 61.[18]

Personal life

Herman Kahn was the son of Abraham Kahn and Yetta Kahn. His wife was Rosalie "Jane" Kahn. He and Jane had two children, David and Debbie.[19]

Cultural influence

Along with John von Neumann, Edward Teller and Wernher von Braun, Kahn was, reportedly, an inspiration for the character "Dr. Strangelove" in the eponymous film by Stanley Kubrick released in 1964.[1][failed verification] After Kubrick read Kahn's book On Thermonuclear War, he began a correspondence with him which led to face-to-face discussions between Kubrick and Kahn.[20] In the film, Dr. Strangelove refers to a report on the Doomsday Machine by the "BLAND Corporation". Kahn gave Kubrick the idea for the "Doomsday Machine", a device which would immediately cause the destruction of the entire planet in the event of a nuclear attack. Both the name and the concept of the weapon are drawn from the text of On Thermonuclear War.[21] Louis Menand observes, "In Kahn’s book, the Doomsday Machine is an example of the sort of deterrent that appeals to the military mind but that is dangerously destabilizing. Since nations are not suicidal, its only use is to threaten."[21]

Publications

Outside physics and statistics, works written by Kahn include:

  • 1960. On Thermonuclear War. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-313-20060-2
  • 1962. Thinking about the unthinkable. Horizon Press.
  • 1965. On escalation: metaphors and scenarios. Praeger. ISBN 1-41283004-4
  • 1967. The Year 2000: a framework for speculation on the next thirty-three years. MacMillan. ISBN 0-02-560440-6. With Anthony Wiener.
  • 1968. Can we win in Viet Nam? Praeger. Kahn with four other authors: Gastil, Raymond D.; Pfaff, William; Stillman, Edmund; Armbruster, Frank E.
  • 1970. The emerging Japanese Superstate: challenge and response. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-274670-0
  • 1971. The Japanese challenge: The success and failure of economic success. Morrow; Andre Deutsch. ISBN 0-688-08710-8
  • 1972. Things to come: thinking about the seventies and eighties. MacMillan. ISBN 0-02-560470-8. With B. Bruce-Briggs.
  • 1973. Herman Kahnsciousness: the megaton ideas of the one-man think tank. New American Library. Selected and edited by Jerome Agel.
  • 1974. The future of the corporation. Mason & Lipscomb. ISBN 0-88405-009-2
  • 1976. The next 200 years: a scenario for America and the world. Morrow. ISBN 0-688-08029-4
  • 1979. World economic development: 1979 and beyond. William Morrow; Croom Helm. ISBN 0-688-03479-9. With Hollender, Jeffrey, and Hollender, John A.
  • 1981. Will she be right? The future of Australia. University of Queensland Press. ISBN 0-7022-1569-4. With Thomas Pepper.
  • 1983. The Coming Boom: economic, political, and social. Simon & Schuster; Hutchinson. ISBN 0-671-49265-9
  • 1984 Thinking about the unthinkable in the 1980s. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-671-47544-4
  • The nature and feasibility of war, deterrence, and arms control (Central nuclear war monograph series), (Hudson Institute)
  • A slightly optimistic world context for 1975–2000 (Hudson Institute)
  • Social limits to growth: "creeping stagnation" vs. "natural and inevitable" (HPS paper)
  • A new kind of class struggle in the United States? (Corporate Environment Program. Research memorandum)

Works published by the RAND Corporation involving Kahn:

  • The nature and feasibility of war and deterrence, RAND Corporation paper P-1888-RC, 1960
  • Some specific suggestions for achieving early non-military defense capabilities and initiating long-range programs, RAND Corporation research memorandum RM-2206-RC, 1958
  • (team led by Herman Kahn) , RAND Corporation report R-322-RC, 1958
  • Herman Kahn and Irwin Mann, War Gaming, RAND Corporation paper P-1167, 1957
  • Herman Kahn and Irwin Mann, , RAND research memorandum RM-1937-PR, 1957
  • Herman Kahn, Stochastic (Monte Carlo) attenuation analysis, Santa, Monica, Calif., RAND Corp., 1949

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Paul Boyer, 'Dr. Strangelove' in Mark C. Carnes (ed.), Past Imperfect: History According to the Movies, New York, 1996.
  2. ^ Fail Safe (DVD). Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. 2000.
  3. ^ Ghamari-Tabrizi, Sharon (June 30, 2009). The Worlds of Herman Kahn: the intuitive science of thermonuclear war. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674037564 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Frankel, Benjamin; Hoops, Townsend (1992). The Cold War, 1945–1991: Leaders and Other Important Figures in the United States and Western Europe. Gale Research. p. 248. ISBN 0-8103-8927-4.
  5. ^ McWhirter, William A. (December 6, 1968). "The Think-Tank Man". Life. Vol. 65, no. 23. pp. 110–126. Herman Kahn is an atheist who still likes rabbis, and a liberal who likes cops.
  6. ^ Ghamari-Tabrizi, Sharon (April 22, 2005). The Worlds of Herman Kahn: the intuitive science of thermonuclear war. Harvard University Press. p. 63. ISBN 978-0674017146.
  7. ^ "Herman Kahn (1922-1983)". www.atomicarchive.com. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  8. ^ Tietz, Tabea. "Herman Kahn and the Consequences of Nuclear War". Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  9. ^ Schwartz, Peter, The Art of the Long View: Planning for the Future in an Uncertain World, New York: Currency Doubleday, 1991, p. 7
  10. ^ Kahn, Herman (1960). "The Nature and Feasibility of War and Deterrence".
  11. ^ "On Thermonuclear War", Herman Kahn
  12. ^ Concepts and Models of Escalation, The Rand Corporation 1984
  13. ^ . Hudson.org. June 1, 2004. Archived from the original on February 5, 2012. Retrieved February 21, 2012.
  14. ^ "The Year 2000", Herman Kahn, Anthony J. Wiener, Macmillan, 1961, pp. 51–55.
  15. ^ "The Next 200 Years", Herman Kahn, Morrow, 1976.
  16. ^ Kahn, Herman; Mann, Irwin (June 1957). Techniques of Systems Analysis. RAND Corporation.
  17. ^ "[월간조선] 朴正熙와 46년 전에 만나 "한국 10大 강대국 된다"고 했던 美미래학자, 그는..." Retrieved October 4, 2016.
  18. ^ "Herman Kahn". www.atomicarchive.com. Retrieved April 27, 2017.
  19. ^ "Herman Kahn". www.geni.com/people/Herman-Kahn/6000000055883295828. Retrieved June 13, 2020.
  20. ^ Maloney, Sean (2020). Deconstructing Dr. Strangelove: The Secret History of Nuclear War Films. Potomac Books. p. 24. ISBN 9781640121928. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
  21. ^ a b "Fat Man – Herman Kahn and the Nuclear Age", Louis Menand, The New Yorker, June 27, 2005

Further reading

  • Barry Bruce-Briggs, Supergenius: The mega-worlds of Herman Kahn, North American Policy Press
  • Samuel T. Cohen, Fuck You Mr. President: Confessions of the Father of the Neutron Bomb", 2006
  • Daniel Ellsberg, The Doomsday Machine, Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner, Bloomsbury Press, 2017
  • Sharon Ghamari-Tabrizi, The Worlds of Herman Kahn: The Intuitive Science of Thermonuclear War, Harvard University Press, ISBN 0-674-01714-5 [reviewed by Christopher Coker in the Times Literary Supplement], nº 5332, June 10, 2005, p. 19.
  • Fred Kaplan, The Wizards of Armageddon, Stanford Nuclear Age Series, ISBN 0-8047-1884-9
  • Kate Lenkowsky, The Herman Kahn Center of the Hudson Institute, Hudson Institute
  • Susan Lindee, Science as Comic Metaphysics, Science 309: 383–384, 2005.
  • Herbert I. London, foreword by Herman Kahn, Why Are They Lying to Our Children (Against the doomsayer futurists), ISBN 0-9673514-2-1
  • Louis Menand, Fat Man: Herman Kahn and the Nuclear Age, in The New Yorker, June 27, 2005.
  • Claus Pias, "Hermann Kahn – Szenarien für den Kalten Krieg", Zurich: Diaphanes 2009, ISBN 978-3-935300-90-2
  • Innes Thacker, Ideological Control and the Depoliticisation of Language, in Bold, Christine (ed.), Cencrastus No. 2, Spring 1980, pp. 30–33, ISSN 0264-0856

External links

  • at the Wayback Machine (archived October 23, 2001)
  • by Andrew Yale Glikman, in , September 26, 1999.
  • RAND Corporation unclassified papers by Herman Kahn, 1948–1959

herman, kahn, archivist, archivist, february, 1922, july, 1983, american, physicist, founding, member, hudson, institute, regarded, preeminent, futurists, latter, part, twentieth, century, originally, came, prominence, military, strategist, systems, theorist, . For the archivist see Herman Kahn archivist Herman Kahn February 15 1922 July 7 1983 was an American physicist and a founding member of the Hudson Institute regarded as one of the preeminent futurists of the latter part of the twentieth century He originally came to prominence as a military strategist and systems theorist while employed at the RAND Corporation He became known for analyzing the likely consequences of nuclear war and recommending ways to improve survivability during the Cold War Kahn posited the idea of a winnable nuclear exchange in his 1960 book On Thermonuclear War for which he is cited as one of the historical inspirations for the title character of Stanley Kubrick s classic black comedy film satire Dr Strangelove 1 In his commentary for Fail Safe director Sidney Lumet remarked that the Professor Groeteschele character is also based on Herman Kahn 2 Kahn s theories contributed to the development of the nuclear strategy of the United States Herman KahnKahn on May 11 1965Born 1922 02 15 February 15 1922Bayonne New Jersey U S DiedJuly 7 1983 1983 07 07 aged 61 Chappaqua New York U S NationalityAmericanAlma materUniversity of California Los Angeles BS California Institute of Technology MS OccupationsFuturistMilitary strategistSystems theoristKnown forNuclear strategyNotable workOn Thermonuclear War Contents 1 Background 2 Cold War theories 3 Hudson Institute 4 The Year 2000 5 Later years 6 Personal life 7 Cultural influence 8 Publications 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Further reading 12 External linksBackground EditKahn was born in Bayonne New Jersey the son of Yetta nee Koslowsky and Abraham Kahn a tailor 3 His parents were Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe He was raised in the Bronx then in Los Angeles following his parents divorce 4 Raised Jewish he later became an atheist 5 Kahn graduated from Fairfax High School in 1940 and served in the United States Army during the Burma campaign in World War II in a non combat capacity as a telephone lineman 6 He received a Bachelor of Science at UCLA and briefly attended CalTech to complete a doctorate before dropping out with a Master of Science due to financial constraints 7 He joined the RAND Corporation as a mathematician after being recruited by fellow physicist Samuel Cohen 8 Cold War theories EditKahn s major contributions were the several strategies he developed during the Cold War to contemplate the unthinkable namely nuclear warfare by using applications of game theory Kahn is often cited with Pierre Wack as a father of scenario planning 9 Kahn argued for deterrence and believed that if the Soviet Union believed that the United States had a second strike capability then it would offer greater deterrence which he wrote in his paper titled The Nature and Feasibility of War and Deterrence 10 The bases of his work were systems theory and game theory as applied to economics and military strategy Kahn argued that for deterrence to succeed the Soviet Union had to be convinced that the United States had second strike capability in order to leave the Politburo in no doubt that even a perfectly coordinated massive attack would guarantee a measure of retaliation that would leave them devastated as well At the minimum an adequate deterrent for the United States must provide an objective basis for a Soviet calculation that would persuade them that no matter how skillful or ingenious they were an attack on the United States would lead to a very high risk if not certainty of large scale destruction to Soviet civil society and military forces 11 In 1962 Kahn published a 16 step escalation ladder By 1965 he had developed this into a 44 step ladder 12 Ostensible Crisis Political Economic and Diplomatic Gestures Solemn and Formal Declarations Hardening of Positions Confrontation of Wills Show of Force Significant Mobilization Legal Harassment Retortions Harassing Acts of Violence Dramatic Military Confrontations Provocative Breaking off of Diplomatic Relations Super Ready Status Large Conventional War or Actions Large Compound Escalation Declaration of Limited Conventional War Barely Nuclear War Nuclear Ultimatums Limited Evacuations 20 Spectacular Show or Demonstration of Force Justifiable Counterforce Attack Peaceful World Wide Embargo or Blockade Local Nuclear War Exemplary Declaration of Limited Nuclear War Local Nuclear War Military Unusual Provocative and Significant Countermeasures Evacuation 70 Demonstration Attack on Zone of Interior Exemplary Attack on Military Exemplary Attacks Against Property Exemplary Attacks on Population Complete Evacuation 95 Reciprocal Reprisals Formal Declaration of General War Slow Motion Counter Property War Slow Motion Counterforce War Constrained Force Reduction Salvo Constrained Disarming Attack Counterforce with Avoidance Attack Unmodified Counterforce Attack Slow Motion Countercity war Countervalue Salvo Augmented Disarming Attack Civilian Devastation Attack Controlled General War Spasm Insensate WarHudson Institute EditIn 1961 Kahn Max Singer and Oscar Ruebhausen founded the Hudson Institute 13 a think tank initially located in Croton on Hudson New York where Kahn was living at the time He recruited sociologist Daniel Bell political philosopher Raymond Aron and novelist Ralph Ellison author of the 1952 classic Invisible Man The Year 2000 EditIn 1967 Herman Kahn and Anthony J Wiener published The Year 2000 A Framework for Speculation on the Next Thirty Three Years which included contributions from staff members of the Hudson Institute and an introduction by Daniel Bell Table XVIII in the document 14 contains a list called One Hundred Technical Innovations Very Likely in the Last Third of the Twentieth Century The first ten predictions were Multiple applications of lasers Extreme high strength structural materials New or improved superperformance fabrics New or improved materials for equipment and appliances New airborne vehicles Ground effect vehicles giant or supersonic jets VTOL STOL Extensive commercial applications of shaped charge explosives More reliable and longer range weather forecasting Extensive and or intensive expansion of tropical agriculture and forestry New sources of power for fixed installations New sources of power for ground transportation Later years EditIn Kahn s view capitalism and technology held nearly boundless potential for progress while the colonization of space lay in the near not the distant future 15 Kahn s 1976 book The Next 200 Years written with William Brown and Leon Martel presented an optimistic scenario of economic conditions in the year 2176 He also wrote a number of books extrapolating the future of the American Japanese and Australian economies and several works on systems theory including the well received 1957 monograph Techniques of System Analysis 16 During the mid 1970s when South Korea s GDP per capita was one of the lowest in the world Kahn predicted that the country would become one of the top 10 most powerful countries in the world by the year 2000 17 In his last year 1983 Kahn wrote approvingly of Ronald Reagan s political agenda in The Coming Boom Economic Political and Social and bluntly derided Jonathan Schell s claims about the long term effects of nuclear war On July 7 that year he died of a stroke aged 61 18 Personal life EditHerman Kahn was the son of Abraham Kahn and Yetta Kahn His wife was Rosalie Jane Kahn He and Jane had two children David and Debbie 19 Cultural influence EditAlong with John von Neumann Edward Teller and Wernher von Braun Kahn was reportedly an inspiration for the character Dr Strangelove in the eponymous film by Stanley Kubrick released in 1964 1 failed verification After Kubrick read Kahn s book On Thermonuclear War he began a correspondence with him which led to face to face discussions between Kubrick and Kahn 20 In the film Dr Strangelove refers to a report on the Doomsday Machine by the BLAND Corporation Kahn gave Kubrick the idea for the Doomsday Machine a device which would immediately cause the destruction of the entire planet in the event of a nuclear attack Both the name and the concept of the weapon are drawn from the text of On Thermonuclear War 21 Louis Menand observes In Kahn s book the Doomsday Machine is an example of the sort of deterrent that appeals to the military mind but that is dangerously destabilizing Since nations are not suicidal its only use is to threaten 21 Publications EditOutside physics and statistics works written by Kahn include 1960 On Thermonuclear War Princeton University Press ISBN 0 313 20060 2 1962 Thinking about the unthinkable Horizon Press 1965 On escalation metaphors and scenarios Praeger ISBN 1 41283004 4 1967 The Year 2000 a framework for speculation on the next thirty three years MacMillan ISBN 0 02 560440 6 With Anthony Wiener 1968 Can we win in Viet Nam Praeger Kahn with four other authors Gastil Raymond D Pfaff William Stillman Edmund Armbruster Frank E 1970 The emerging Japanese Superstate challenge and response Prentice Hall ISBN 0 13 274670 0 1971 The Japanese challenge The success and failure of economic success Morrow Andre Deutsch ISBN 0 688 08710 8 1972 Things to come thinking about the seventies and eighties MacMillan ISBN 0 02 560470 8 With B Bruce Briggs 1973 Herman Kahnsciousness the megaton ideas of the one man think tank New American Library Selected and edited by Jerome Agel 1974 The future of the corporation Mason amp Lipscomb ISBN 0 88405 009 2 1976 The next 200 years a scenario for America and the world Morrow ISBN 0 688 08029 4 1979 World economic development 1979 and beyond William Morrow Croom Helm ISBN 0 688 03479 9 With Hollender Jeffrey and Hollender John A 1981 Will she be right The future of Australia University of Queensland Press ISBN 0 7022 1569 4 With Thomas Pepper 1983 The Coming Boom economic political and social Simon amp Schuster Hutchinson ISBN 0 671 49265 9 1984 Thinking about the unthinkable in the 1980s New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 0 671 47544 4 The nature and feasibility of war deterrence and arms control Central nuclear war monograph series Hudson Institute A slightly optimistic world context for 1975 2000 Hudson Institute Social limits to growth creeping stagnation vs natural and inevitable HPS paper A new kind of class struggle in the United States Corporate Environment Program Research memorandum Works published by the RAND Corporation involving Kahn The nature and feasibility of war and deterrence RAND Corporation paper P 1888 RC 1960 Some specific suggestions for achieving early non military defense capabilities and initiating long range programs RAND Corporation research memorandum RM 2206 RC 1958 team led by Herman Kahn Report on a study of Non Military Defense RAND Corporation report R 322 RC 1958 Herman Kahn and Irwin Mann War Gaming RAND Corporation paper P 1167 1957 Herman Kahn and Irwin Mann Ten common pitfalls RAND research memorandum RM 1937 PR 1957 Herman Kahn Stochastic Monte Carlo attenuation analysis Santa Monica Calif RAND Corp 1949See also EditNuclear triadNotes Edit a b Paul Boyer Dr Strangelove in Mark C Carnes ed Past Imperfect History According to the Movies New York 1996 Fail Safe DVD Columbia Pictures Industries Inc 2000 Ghamari Tabrizi Sharon June 30 2009 The Worlds of Herman Kahn the intuitive science of thermonuclear war Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674037564 via Google Books Frankel Benjamin Hoops Townsend 1992 The Cold War 1945 1991 Leaders and Other Important Figures in the United States and Western Europe Gale Research p 248 ISBN 0 8103 8927 4 McWhirter William A December 6 1968 The Think Tank Man Life Vol 65 no 23 pp 110 126 Herman Kahn is an atheist who still likes rabbis and a liberal who likes cops Ghamari Tabrizi Sharon April 22 2005 The Worlds of Herman Kahn the intuitive science of thermonuclear war Harvard University Press p 63 ISBN 978 0674017146 Herman Kahn 1922 1983 www atomicarchive com Retrieved December 29 2022 Tietz Tabea Herman Kahn and the Consequences of Nuclear War Retrieved December 29 2022 Schwartz Peter The Art of the Long View Planning for the Future in an Uncertain World New York Currency Doubleday 1991 p 7 Kahn Herman 1960 The Nature and Feasibility of War and Deterrence On Thermonuclear War Herman Kahn Concepts and Models of Escalation The Rand Corporation 1984 Hudson Institute gt About Hudson gt History Hudson org June 1 2004 Archived from the original on February 5 2012 Retrieved February 21 2012 The Year 2000 Herman Kahn Anthony J Wiener Macmillan 1961 pp 51 55 The Next 200 Years Herman Kahn Morrow 1976 Kahn Herman Mann Irwin June 1957 Techniques of Systems Analysis RAND Corporation 월간조선 朴正熙와 46년 전에 만나 한국 10大 강대국 된다 고 했던 美미래학자 그는 Retrieved October 4 2016 Herman Kahn www atomicarchive com Retrieved April 27 2017 Herman Kahn www geni com people Herman Kahn 6000000055883295828 Retrieved June 13 2020 Maloney Sean 2020 Deconstructing Dr Strangelove The Secret History of Nuclear War Films Potomac Books p 24 ISBN 9781640121928 Retrieved August 10 2022 a b Fat Man Herman Kahn and the Nuclear Age Louis Menand The New Yorker June 27 2005Further reading EditBarry Bruce Briggs Supergenius The mega worlds of Herman Kahn North American Policy Press Samuel T Cohen Fuck You Mr President Confessions of the Father of the Neutron Bomb 2006 Daniel Ellsberg The Doomsday Machine Confessions of a Nuclear War Planner Bloomsbury Press 2017 Sharon Ghamari Tabrizi The Worlds of Herman Kahn The Intuitive Science of Thermonuclear War Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 01714 5 reviewed by Christopher Coker in the Times Literary Supplement nº 5332 June 10 2005 p 19 Fred Kaplan The Wizards of Armageddon Stanford Nuclear Age Series ISBN 0 8047 1884 9 Kate Lenkowsky The Herman Kahn Center of the Hudson Institute Hudson Institute Susan Lindee Science as Comic Metaphysics Science 309 383 384 2005 Herbert I London foreword by Herman Kahn Why Are They Lying to Our Children Against the doomsayer futurists ISBN 0 9673514 2 1 Louis Menand Fat Man Herman Kahn and the Nuclear Age in The New Yorker June 27 2005 Claus Pias Hermann Kahn Szenarien fur den Kalten Krieg Zurich Diaphanes 2009 ISBN 978 3 935300 90 2 Innes Thacker Ideological Control and the Depoliticisation of Language in Bold Christine ed Cencrastus No 2 Spring 1980 pp 30 33 ISSN 0264 0856External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Herman Kahn Essays about and by Herman Kahn Kahn s escalation ladder at the Wayback Machine archived October 23 2001 Herman Kahn s Doomsday Machine by Andrew Yale Glikman in CYB ORG COLD WAR MACHINE FrAme September 26 1999 RAND Corporation unclassified papers by Herman Kahn 1948 1959 Hudson Institute unclassified articles and papers by Herman Kahn 1962 1984 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Herman Kahn amp oldid 1130634616, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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