Squaring the Circle

Ghost in the Machine with Michael Ferguson

Oct 22, 2025
Michael P. Ferguson, an active duty U.S. Army officer and historian, discusses the complexities of unmanned warfare. He emphasizes the importance of skepticism toward technological solutions, drawing historical parallels to Athens’ naval reliance. Ferguson explores how human motivations, as described by Thucydides, shape modern conflict. He argues that while drones lower risks, they complicate conflict resolution and highlights the need for human control. He urges listeners to engage critically with military strategy and contribute to the discourse.
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INSIGHT

Humans Still Drive War

  • War will remain driven by human fear, honor, and interest even as machines proliferate on the battlefield.
  • Machines inherit human purposes, so technological change does not remove core political and emotional drivers of conflict.
ADVICE

Question Technological Panaceas

  • Be skeptical of promises that new technologies will be panaceas for future wars and strategy failures.
  • Test assumptions about decisive advantages because technological parity will often cancel promised effects.
INSIGHT

Strategy Follows Culture And Geography

  • Strategic culture and geography shape technological choices and complacency about risk.
  • The U.S. privilege of distant engagement encourages investment in tech to avoid trading space for time.
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