- Downloads:
- The Economic Causes of War_2.pdf
Robbins’ analysis here presented has still a place in the rational discussion of the possible causes of war. It fits very well the period of history in regard to which the Marxian theories here discussed were originally elaborated.
![The Economic Causes of War by Lionel Robbins](https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_6_9_650w/s3/static-page/img/The%20Economic%20Causes%20of%20War_Robbins.jpg.webp?itok=9J4H3aAg 650w,https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_6_9_870w/s3/static-page/img/The%20Economic%20Causes%20of%20War_Robbins.jpg.webp?itok=m3dK5d6K 870w,https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_6_9_1090w/s3/static-page/img/The%20Economic%20Causes%20of%20War_Robbins.jpg.webp?itok=XhiHizql 1090w,https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_6_9_1310w/s3/static-page/img/The%20Economic%20Causes%20of%20War_Robbins.jpg.webp?itok=4yTS0s1d 1310w,https://cdn.mises.org/styles/responsive_6_9_1530w/s3/static-page/img/The%20Economic%20Causes%20of%20War_Robbins.jpg.webp?itok=HKHdPe4v 1530w)
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Lionel Charles Robbins (1898-1984) was one of the leading English economists of the twentieth century. His An Essay on the Nature and Significance of Economic Science (1932) is as an outstanding statement of the Misesian view of economic method; that is, namely, that economics is a social science and must advance its propositions by means of deductive reasoning and not through the methods used in the natural sciences. Robbins’ The Great Depression (1934) brilliantly applies the Austrian theory of the business cycle to explain the depression—which, he notes, was of unprecedented severity.