Which of the following statements DOES NOT accurately reflect Ernst Jünger's description of the Battle of the Somme in The Storm of Steel?
a. The soldier became in some ways a different type of human being entirely. "More mysterious and hardy and callous," but also "fascinating and imposing."
b. That the combat at the Somme was fundamentally new. Battles were now not events, but a "condition of things" that consumed everything in a "storm of steel."
c. Combat at the Somme was so bloody because Europeans had been consumed with militarism and neglecting the pursuit of science for too long.
d. Battle in the First World War was chaotic. Generals did not know where their soldiers were and the common soldiers' "power of logical thought" was often suspended in the "storm of steel."