Publications
Military and Strategic Affairs, Volume 2, No. 2, October 2010

The Czech philosopher Edmund Husserl (1859-1938) claimed that as we are thinking creatures amassing life experiences, assisted by language and descriptive capabilities and endowed with the ability to judge, draw conclusions, and make decisions, and as we are constantly in search of truths, from time to time there occur conceptual developments in our understanding of reality, followed by linguistic developments. Husserl, who preceded the era in which post-modernism has assumed intellectual hegemony, also claimed that “to live always means to live in the certainty of the world. To live alertly means to be alert to the world, to be ‘aware’ constantly and tangibly of the world and of yourself as living in the world.”