📚 Education — Books

Books are listed in the order they were added — newest first. The order carries no other significance.
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The Military Institutions of the Romans (De Re Militari)
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The Military Institutions of the Romans (De Re Militari)
by Flavius Vegetius Renatus (N.P. Milner, trans.)
Written in the late 4th century AD, Vegetius compiled the military knowledge of the entire Roman empire into a single training manual. The most widely read military text in medieval Europe, it covers recruitment, drill, tactics, fortification, and naval warfare. Every serious student of strategy has read this book.
War as I Knew It
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War as I Knew It
by General George S. Patton Jr.
Patton's own account of his World War II campaigns in North Africa, Sicily, France, and Germany. A rare first-person view of battlefield command from the most aggressive and controversial American general of the war -- raw, confident, and full of tactical wisdom.
Unrestricted Warfare
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Unrestricted Warfare
by Qiao Liang & Wang Xiangsui
Written by two Chinese PLA colonels in 1999, this is China's doctrine for warfare that transcends military boundaries -- financial warfare, cyber attacks, terrorism, media manipulation, and legal warfare combined into a unified strategy. Essential for understanding how great power competition is actually conducted in the 21st century.
The 48 Laws of Power
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The 48 Laws of Power
by Robert Greene
Greene distills 3,000 years of history into the laws that govern the acquisition and use of power. Essential reading for understanding the dynamics of ambition, competition, and human nature in any arena.
The 33 Strategies of War
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The 33 Strategies of War
by Robert Greene
Greene applies centuries of military strategy to modern competitive situations. An encyclopedic guide to offensive and defensive thinking drawn from Napoleon, Sun Tzu, Wellington, and dozens of historical commanders.
The Art of War
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The Art of War
by Sun Tzu
The oldest and most influential military treatise in history. Written in the 5th century BC, its principles of strategy, intelligence, and deception remain the foundation of competitive thinking across warfare, business, and investing.
On War
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On War
by Carl von Clausewitz
The definitive Western philosophy of war. Clausewitz's concept that war is the continuation of politics by other means, and his analysis of friction, fog, and the nature of decisive action, remain foundational for understanding conflict and competition.
Infantry Attacks
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Infantry Attacks
by Erwin Rommel
Rommel's first-person account of his infantry tactics in World War I. A study of aggressive initiative, rapid decision-making under pressure, and leading from the front that made him one of history's most studied battlefield commanders.
The Book of Five Rings
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The Book of Five Rings
by Miyamoto Musashi
Written by Japan's greatest swordsman in 1645, this is a treatise on strategy, tactics, and mastery. Musashi's framework for reading and adapting to any situation has been studied by military leaders and executives for centuries.
The Seven Military Classics of Ancient China
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The Seven Military Classics of Ancient China
by Various (Ralph D. Sawyer, trans.)
The canonical collection of ancient Chinese military philosophy including Sun Tzu, Wu Qi, and five other foundational texts. The comprehensive source for Chinese strategic thought that influenced two millennia of East Asian military and political thinking.
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