“The Science of War: Sun Tzu’s ‘Art of War’ Re-translated and Re-considered” by Christopher MacDonald

Every young pup sent to East Asia is probably given Sun Tzu’s The Art of War to read, especially if one is male, and especially if one’s boss is both male and Chinese. Anyway, I was.

I found it a work of pithy aphorisms which, while undoubtedly useful, seemed—once stated—commensical rather than revelatory. “Move only when it suits your purpose. Otherwise stay put,” is one example in Christopher MacDonald’s new translation: a sort of winner-take-all version of the “God helps those that help themselves” sort of advice in Poor Richard’s Almanack.

For those that do not know Sun Tzu, even by reputation, MacDonald writes that

 

The original work, dating from the decades before and after 300 BC, was the most systematic exploration of military philosophy, strategy and tactics of its era, and to this day it remains probably the most profound and comprehensive single volume on these topics.

 

It is a common text in military academies and is recommended as a guide to success in any competitive activity, from business to sport.

 

The Science of War: Sun Tzu's Art of War Re-translated and re-considered, Christopher MacDonald (Earnshaw Books, June 2018)
The Science of War: Sun Tzu’s Art of War Re-translated and re-considered, Christopher MacDonald (Earnshaw Books, June 2018)

Regardless or perhaps because of its ubiquity, one might question whether the English-reading public needs a new English translation of The Art of War. But as is perhaps evident from the rechristened title, The Science of War, MacDonald takes issue with some of the ways previous translations have rendered parts of the text, and perhaps with reason: the extensive translator’s note is interesting and, in the absence of enough Chinese language capability to second-guess, persuasive.

It is hard to imagine, however, that many English-readers engage with Sun Tzu with this degree of exegesis. The value of the work for most surely lies in the various sayings’ accessibility and ability to provoke reflection, in which

 

allusion is preferred to direct reference, and fuzzy reasoning trumps raw logic, the use of complementary opposites helps to stretch the imagination, challenging the reader to explore for deeper patterns in the material and grasp abstractions that may be new and unusual…

 

MacDonald attributes this to classical Chinese, but surely all the best admonitions have this character. The wisdom in Sun Tzu—not unlike that in, say, the Bible—while not perhaps independent of the original meaning of the source text, will for the most part transcend linguistic nuance.

The English in this version is nonetheless very clean, straightforward and readable. And so if one has never read Sun Tzu, or needs a new copy, one could do far worse than to use this one.

 

Sun Tzu is, as leadership manuals go, extremely concise—the translation is only some 70 pages—hardly surprising since books of that era

 

were comprised of bamboo slats (each a little wider and longer than a chopstick) bound into rolls by silk thread, with script written top-to-bottom in soot-black ink.

 

And the English is relatively wordy; MacDonald includes the original Chinese as well, which comes in at less than one-third the length.

But the bulk of this new volume, and probably its raison-d’être for those who are neither Chinese scholars nor looking for a management primer, are several lengthy essays from MacDonald placing the text in context, including a fascinating discussion on its origins and theories as to its authorship; how the text was (or may have been) used by military leaders down the ages; and what the text might tell us about contemporary China. These are accompanied by three contributed academic prefaces and the translator’s note.

In the first essay, MacDonald concludes that Sun Tzu was probably not an actual person, but perhaps an amalgam of two. The historical analysis is leavened with entertaining anecdote, including one on one of the likely originators of the text, the 6th century BCE Sun Wu. Sun had been asked by the King of Wu to demonstrate his skill by drilling “the palace ladies in basic marching skills, while king and court observed from a pavilion terrace.” This resulted in more giggles than marching.

 

The regulation penalty for failure to carry out clearly expressed orders, Sun solemnly announced, was to be the beheading of the company commanders.

 

One of the two was a particular favorite of the King but

 

Sun sent back a message stating that as chief commander, appointed on sovereign authority, he was obliged to disregard certain interventions in military matters from even the monarch.

 

In the next drill, “the ladies marched to perfection,” and Sun was appointed to “a position of senior military command and the kingdom went on to claim a string of military successes.”

 

MacDonald’s attempts to link Sun Tzu to such latter-day actual commanders as Genghis Khan and Napoleon are less convincing for there is no concrete evidence that they were familiar with the work. MacDonald admits as such. The parallels in tactics and execution he documents are interesting but he hasn’t ruled out coincidence: good commanders might either know these rules instinctively or derive them on their own.

But the big question is whether a study of Sun Tzu helps understand contemporary Chinese policy. The simple answer is that since one can reasonably assume the entire Chinese leadership has studied it, it can’t hurt.

Yet, while MacDonald’s description and analysis of Chinese policy and strategy is well worth reading, much of Sun Tzu itself comes down to appeals to common sense, and as a result the predictive value of the work may be limited. Indeed, one of the key principles, says MacDonald is to “be flexible and unpredictable”.

“The campaign-level insights of Sun Tzu,” he writes,

 

can be summarized in two key principles, which form the cornerstone of China’s traditional strategic culture and the basis of Chinese strategy to this day:

 

 

* Maximize your prospects of victory in war by stealthily accruing strategic advantage across the full political and military spectrum, well in advance of battle

 

* Minimize the risk and cost of war by aiming to achieve your aims without battle, where battle can be avoided, or by restricting your armies to limited objectives, where battle cannot be avoided.

 

Or, as is attributed Barack Obama, “Don’t do dumb stuff.”

The Art of War remains an excellent primer and aidemémoire, well  worth reading (or re-reading). One can only hope (against hope) that the American delegation to the (on-again, off-again) summit with North Korea refers to it rather than The Art of the Deal.


Peter Gordon is editor of the Asian Review of Books.