Von Moltke, for instance, wrote extensively on exploiting the railroad and the telegraph to insure victory. With the evolution of weapons, tactics and technology that resulted from the American Civil War and the Franco-Prussian War, military science needed to go beyond mere considerations of the battlefield. However, as Clausewitz observed, “unlike in any other science or art, in war the object reacts.”Īlthough there had been earlier generals and writers such as Sun Tzu, Aeneas Tacticus, Miyamoto Musashi, Niccolò Machiavelli, and others who had focused on using military power to efficiently achieve a civilization's political goals – whether that be defending the homeland or beating up one's neighbors – it was Carl von Clausewitz, Ardant du Picq, Alfred Thayer Mahan and Helmuth von Moltke (the Elder) who gave theories of warfare the patina of science in the latter half of the 1800s. Until the end of the Second World War, when the arrival of atomic weapons made a lot of its assumptions baseless, the term was always written starting with capital letters in English and was considered an academic discipline on par with physics, philosophy and political science. Military Science is the study of the theory and application of “organized coercive force,” both friendly and enemy. It also manages to modernize mounted soldiers one last time, creating the Cavalry - a mounted brigade that combines the mobility of traditional cavalry with the fighting power of rifle-wielding soldiers.
This approach to warfare provides the ultimate boost to military preparation, in the form of the last military building of the Encampment: the Military Academy. And it emphasizes something the good general knows instinctively: how important organization and discipline are on the field. It encompasses not only the study of modern weapons (since these are advancing at an unbelievable pace, making it a frequent occurrence a weapon a cadet studied to become obsolete right after he finishes school), but also of employing the terrain to one's advantage, using transport and logistics (and denying the enemy their use), and so on. Military science is tactics elevated to the highest possible level, a level almost as sophisticated as one of the real sciences.
It can be hurried by killing a unit with a Knight. Military Science is an Industrial Era technology in Civilization VI. – Winston Churchill "No one starts a war - or rather, no one in his senses ought to do so - without first being clear in his mind what he intends to achieve by that war and how he intends to conduct it." "However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results." Military Academy Back to the list of technologies