Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 July 2011
Great wars, the rise and decline of empires, observed differences in the power and influence of nations, and in general the uneven levels of national achievement in international politics have inspired much speculation and hypothesis-building. Men have felt the need for satisfying explanations of past events and patterns, and even greater need for plausible hypotheses with which to approach the future. The last seventy-five years or so have witnessed a bumper crop of hypotheses designed to account for or to anticipate the ordering of political relationships in the society of nations. One characteristic of most of these activities has been a persistent search for the “master variable” that would provide a simple yet plausible and satisfying basis for explaining or predicting the ordering of political relationships among nations.
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24 The above quotations and those that follow are from “Science Will Change the Balance of Power.”
25 There is a respectable body of opinion that doubts the ability of the underdeveloped countries to overtake those that are technologically most advanced. P. M. S. Blackett, for example, recently argued before the British Association for the Advancement of Science that the underdeveloped countries “have missed the bus, not by default but by chance of history,” and that science is no good to them directly, though “it helps us [the Western nations] to provide them more cheaply with the things they need.” (New York Times, August 29, 1962.).
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