An Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Robert Malthus
- Written by Ciarán Casey, Assistant Professor in Economics, University of Limerick
Thomas Robert Malthus is remembered for the gloomiest theory proposed in just about any discipline. The story begins in 1793, when the English journalist and philosopher William Godwin published a book called An Enquiry Concerning Political Justice[1]. It predicted a utopian future and became a classic of philosophical anarchism.
One of its admirers[2] was a wealthy landowner named Daniel Malthus. He debated its merits with his adult son, Thomas, a clergyman and Cambridge scholar. Few family debates end as gainfully. Thomas wrote down his counterargument, which was published in 1798 as An Essay on the Principle of Population.