Cultural and Technological Critique
The authors lament Silicon Valley’s shift from national purpose—such as wartime innovation—to trivial consumer-focused projects like photo apps and ad algorithms The Washington PostGoodreadsK Book Publishing.
They argue that this has eroded both Western cybersecurity preparedness and cultural confidence The Washington PostFinancial TimesGoodreadsK Book Publishing.
Hard Power Meets Soft Belief
Karp and Zamiska advocate for a balanced integration of hard power (military strength, strategic investments like AI arms) and soft belief (shared civic values, ideological purpose) as the foundation of Western resilience Summar Books+1The Washington Post.
A Call to Renew Tech–State Collaboration
The book argues for reviving the historical alliance between industry and government (like the Manhattan Project era) to rebuild global leadership in technology, especially amid rising AI-powered threats The GuardianThe Washington PostGoodreadsK Book PublishingFinancial Times.
Reception & Significance
Praised as a “rallying cry” and compared to landmark cultural critiques like Allan Bloom’s The Closing of the American Mind The Washington PostAmazonAmazon IndiaAmazon.
Endorsed by figures like Walter Isaacson, Eric Schmidt, Jamie Dimon, General James Mattis, Stanley Druckenmiller, and Anders Fogh Rasmussen for its urgency and relevance AmazonAmazon IndiaAmazon South Africa.
Media coverage, including articles in The Guardian, Financial Times, and Washington Post, highlight the book’s critique of Silicon Valley’s detachment from national imperatives and its call for renewed patriotic belie
Engineering, Fiction, Geography
Fhe technological republic hard power soft bellef and the future of the west
alecander c karpand nicholas w zamiska/p
₨ 3,505
the technological republic hard power soft bellef and the future of the west alecander c karpand nicholas w zamiska
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