CC: Well, I'll take that one. If you're trying to set up a fledgling professional military education system in the 19th century, and you've got the philosopher of war Clausewitz who basically says, "to master war you've got to be a genius". Then you've got this other guy, Jomini who says, boy, if you apply these principles, you can be successful. Which one do you get to base your education on? So obviously that's the appeal of Jomini. There's an engineering solution to war. If you apply these principles, you'll be successful. You can teach it. So you can bring in young men from all over the United States and put them in a place like U.S. Military Academy, and you teach them these principles and send them out to be successful leaders. It's the attraction of his presentation, and the appeal of this scientific solution that appeals to professional military education, especially in the 19th century. And it carries on into the 20th as well.