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maxolon tablets These sorts of explanation offer analytic clarity but, Clark argues, at the expense of distorting the story: they ???create the illusion of a steadily building causal pressure???, with factors piling on one another, ???each pushing down on events???. Political actors become the puppets of outside forces: ???Causes trawled from the length and breadth of Europe???s prewar decades are piled like weights on the scale until it tilts from probability to inevitability.??? This doesn???t, I think, preclude the view offered fifty years ago by Paul Schroeder, a leading American diplomatic historian, that the statesmen and politicians involved felt themselves to be in the grip of forces beyond their control and that this perception influenced their actions. Nor does it mean that some ??? indeed most ??? of the actors were not wrong about which ways these forces were moving. (???We are within measurable or imaginable distance of real Armageddon,??? Asquith said on 24 July 1914. ???Happily there seems to be no reason why we should be anything more than spectators.???) Human agency, however benighted, is everywhere in this book. But that doesn???t mean it is written to indict any one agent or the servants of any one nation or to make the case for inadvertency or pure contingency.