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The Scientific-Military State

How Enlightened Engineers Reinvented Early American Government

Argues that engineers influenced by French Enlightenment science built much of the machinery of America’s military state while redrawing the line between the federal government and society.
 
In The Scientific-Military State, Sveinn M. Jóhannesson charts the emergence of a new kind of governance in early-nineteenth-century America: the scientific-military state. Federal officials used mathematics, science, and other forms of enlightened knowledge to launch the nation’s very first experiments in scientific education and expert administration. These figures forged a new intellectual elite that socially elevated itself above ordinary soldiers, workers, and civilians and reshaped the military state itself beyond familiar models of standing army or militia. Originating primarily from the US Military Academy at West Point, these experts, who were often engineers, debated statecraft, analyzed topography, designed fortifications, manufactured weapons, built infrastructure, and exercised military power as the United States spread across the continent. But the even deeper result was a transformed relationship between the government and its citizens, one that echoes today.

336 pages | 17 halftones, 2 tables | 6 x 9

American Beginnings, 1500-1900

History: American History, Military History

History of Science

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Enlightenment in Arms: From Mézières to Yorktown
2. Archimedes in America
3. War and the Remaking of the Central State
4. Seeing Like Soldiers
5. Fortifying the American State
6. Engineering the Transportation Revolution
7. Contriving Conquest: A State Remade at War
Epilogue

Acknowledgments
Notes
Index

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