isa haskologlu | University of Delaware (original) (raw)

Papers by isa haskologlu

Research paper thumbnail of Augmented Reality in Military Training and Education

In recent years Augmented Reality (AR) has become widespread throughout the world and is used to ... more In recent years Augmented Reality (AR) has become widespread throughout the world and is used to make world easier. It is the combination of the real world and the virtual world. Augmented reality (AR) is a live, direct or indirect, view of a physical, real-world environment whose elements are augmented by computer-generated sensory input such as sound, video, graphics or GPS data. It enhances one’s perception of the world by giving him/her valuable information. In this article we will discuss the applications of AR and its military applications and its advantages in military training and education by using it in military brochures, manuals and in the field.

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Research paper thumbnail of A Perspective of Applications of Unmanned Systems in Asymmetric Warfare

International Journal of Information and Education Technology, 2013

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Research paper thumbnail of State capacity and termination of terror campaigns: a qualitative evidence from PKK

British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, 2022

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Research paper thumbnail of Fear as Driver of International Relations

E-IR, 2020

We know that sentiment rather than reason or rationality drives voter behavior (Winter, 2015), ma... more We know that sentiment rather than reason or rationality drives voter behavior (Winter, 2015), market investment behavior (Baker and Wurgler, 2007) and even foreign policies of nations. Decisions and patterns of action cannot be divorced entirely from human emotions. One ignores them at one's own peril. Culture, identity, and symbolic politics (Kaufman, 2006), emotions along with rationality (Khan, 2004), constitute the core of human motivation. Fear is one such primal emotion that plays a profound role in determining how individuals, groups, tribes, and states shape the choices and actions of human agencies. Scholars and experts of finance take fear so seriously that they have devised many indices to measure fear (Rubbaniy, Asmerom, Rizvi, Naqvi, 2014), quantify it, and predict its impact. In this thought piece, we explore how the emotion and idea of fear has shaped the political philosophy of the state and how fear is a key construct in international relations theories. We explore five different discourses that constitute the contemporary political theory of international relations and explore the different ways in which the idea of fear anchors those discourses. This list of five discourses is certainly neither exhaustive nor necessarily a list of the five most important discourses, they merely represent the epistemic landscape that interests the authors of this essay. Another thing to note is that the five fears we have identified reflect five distinct political phenomena; they are (1) fear as the progenitor of the state, (2) fear as the primary ontology of the international system (3) fear of war as the basis of global governance and (4) fear as an instrument of change as terrorism, coercive diplomacy, and sanctions and (5) fear of extinction and fragmentation as the trigger for civil wars and ethnic conflict. From Fear to Power: Political Philosophy of the State We begin this essay with a nod towards the political philosophy of fear and examine how prominent past philosophers explained the emergence of polities, political cooperation to provide security and order using the primal emotion of fear. Any parsimonious study of the political philosophy of fear must include Thucydides, Ibn Khaldun, and Thomas Hobbes, an ancient, a medieval and a modern political philosopher. They are central to understanding how fear as experienced in the state of nature is ultimately overcome by

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Research paper thumbnail of Fear as Driver of International Relations

Fear as Driver of International Relations, 2020

We know that sentiment rather than reason or rationality drives voter behavior (Winter, 2015), ma... more We know that sentiment rather than reason or rationality drives voter behavior (Winter, 2015), market investment behavior (Baker and Wurgler, 2007) and even foreign policies of nations. Decisions and patterns of action cannot be divorced entirely from human emotions. One ignores them at one’s own peril. Culture, identity, and symbolic politics (Kaufman, 2006), emotions along with rationality (Khan, 2004), constitute the core of human motivation. Fear is one such primal emotion that plays a profound role in determining how individuals, groups, tribes, and states shape the choices and actions of human agencies. Scholars and experts of finance take fear so seriously that they have devised many indices to measure fear (Rubbaniy, Asmerom, Rizvi, Naqvi, 2014), quantify it, and predict its impact. In this thought piece, we explore how the emotion and idea of fear have shaped the political philosophy of the state and how fear is a key construct in international relations theories.

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Research paper thumbnail of A Perspective of Applications of Unmanned Systems in Asymmetric Warfare

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Research paper thumbnail of Augmented Reality in Military training and Education

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Augmented Reality in Military Training and Education

In recent years Augmented Reality (AR) has become widespread throughout the world and is used to ... more In recent years Augmented Reality (AR) has become widespread throughout the world and is used to make world easier. It is the combination of the real world and the virtual world. Augmented reality (AR) is a live, direct or indirect, view of a physical, real-world environment whose elements are augmented by computer-generated sensory input such as sound, video, graphics or GPS data. It enhances one’s perception of the world by giving him/her valuable information. In this article we will discuss the applications of AR and its military applications and its advantages in military training and education by using it in military brochures, manuals and in the field.

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of A Perspective of Applications of Unmanned Systems in Asymmetric Warfare

International Journal of Information and Education Technology, 2013

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of State capacity and termination of terror campaigns: a qualitative evidence from PKK

British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, 2022

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Fear as Driver of International Relations

E-IR, 2020

We know that sentiment rather than reason or rationality drives voter behavior (Winter, 2015), ma... more We know that sentiment rather than reason or rationality drives voter behavior (Winter, 2015), market investment behavior (Baker and Wurgler, 2007) and even foreign policies of nations. Decisions and patterns of action cannot be divorced entirely from human emotions. One ignores them at one's own peril. Culture, identity, and symbolic politics (Kaufman, 2006), emotions along with rationality (Khan, 2004), constitute the core of human motivation. Fear is one such primal emotion that plays a profound role in determining how individuals, groups, tribes, and states shape the choices and actions of human agencies. Scholars and experts of finance take fear so seriously that they have devised many indices to measure fear (Rubbaniy, Asmerom, Rizvi, Naqvi, 2014), quantify it, and predict its impact. In this thought piece, we explore how the emotion and idea of fear has shaped the political philosophy of the state and how fear is a key construct in international relations theories. We explore five different discourses that constitute the contemporary political theory of international relations and explore the different ways in which the idea of fear anchors those discourses. This list of five discourses is certainly neither exhaustive nor necessarily a list of the five most important discourses, they merely represent the epistemic landscape that interests the authors of this essay. Another thing to note is that the five fears we have identified reflect five distinct political phenomena; they are (1) fear as the progenitor of the state, (2) fear as the primary ontology of the international system (3) fear of war as the basis of global governance and (4) fear as an instrument of change as terrorism, coercive diplomacy, and sanctions and (5) fear of extinction and fragmentation as the trigger for civil wars and ethnic conflict. From Fear to Power: Political Philosophy of the State We begin this essay with a nod towards the political philosophy of fear and examine how prominent past philosophers explained the emergence of polities, political cooperation to provide security and order using the primal emotion of fear. Any parsimonious study of the political philosophy of fear must include Thucydides, Ibn Khaldun, and Thomas Hobbes, an ancient, a medieval and a modern political philosopher. They are central to understanding how fear as experienced in the state of nature is ultimately overcome by

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Fear as Driver of International Relations

Fear as Driver of International Relations, 2020

We know that sentiment rather than reason or rationality drives voter behavior (Winter, 2015), ma... more We know that sentiment rather than reason or rationality drives voter behavior (Winter, 2015), market investment behavior (Baker and Wurgler, 2007) and even foreign policies of nations. Decisions and patterns of action cannot be divorced entirely from human emotions. One ignores them at one’s own peril. Culture, identity, and symbolic politics (Kaufman, 2006), emotions along with rationality (Khan, 2004), constitute the core of human motivation. Fear is one such primal emotion that plays a profound role in determining how individuals, groups, tribes, and states shape the choices and actions of human agencies. Scholars and experts of finance take fear so seriously that they have devised many indices to measure fear (Rubbaniy, Asmerom, Rizvi, Naqvi, 2014), quantify it, and predict its impact. In this thought piece, we explore how the emotion and idea of fear have shaped the political philosophy of the state and how fear is a key construct in international relations theories.

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Research paper thumbnail of A Perspective of Applications of Unmanned Systems in Asymmetric Warfare

Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact

Research paper thumbnail of Augmented Reality in Military training and Education

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