Why War?

Albert EINSTEIN   |   Sigmund FREUD

Item#: 108113 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Why War?
Why War?

LIMITED EDITION IN ENGLISH OF EINSTEIN AND FREUD'S WHY WAR?, 1933, ONE OF 2000 COPIES PUBLISHED, MOST BELIEVED TO HAVE BEEN LOST IN THE WAR

EINSTEIN, Albert and FREUD, Sigmund. Why War? [Dijon, France]: International Institute of Intellectual Co-operation, League of Nations, 1933. Octavo, later three-quarter red cloth.

Limited first edition in English, number 977 of 2000 copies of Einstein and Freud's correspondence on peace and politics on the eve of World War II.

"In 1931 the International Institute of Intellectual Co-operation was instructed by a committee of the League of Nations to arrange for an exchange of letters, intended for publication, between representative intellectual to promote discussion of the concerns of the league. One of the first to be approached was Albert Einstein; the person he, in turn chose to correspond with was Sigmund Freud" (Mark Leith). Einstein had met Freud in Berlin five years earlier through Freud's youngest son and the two had engaged in a wide-ranging conversation on their work. Thus, when it came to the question of the psychological motivations underpinning war, Einstein believed Freud to be an authority. Freud, however, had his doubts. This work shows Einstein to be correct in his assessment, as Freud astutely explores man's tendency to fall into a cyclical pattern of warlike behavior. Einstein, too, provides his perspective the tendency for the then-unnamed military-industrial complex to cause war. Both recognized the futility of war in this poignant philosophical undertaking, written as the Nazis were coming to power. Preceded by the German first edition. Very few copies of this work remain; most are believed to have been lost in the war. Ex-libris Fraser Institute Montreal, with two bookplates, blindstamps on pages 9 and 19, number on page 11, and other expected markings. Binder stamp.

A bit of faint dampstaining, mainly to endpapers and preliminaries, wear to binding. An extremely good copy.

add to my wishlist ask an Expert

Author's full list of books

EINSTEIN, Albert >