John J. Mearsheimer is the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago. He is the author of The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities. He lives in Chicago, IL. Sebastian Rosato is professor of political science at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of Intentions in Great Power Politics: Uncertainty and the Roots of Conflict. He lives in South Bend, IN.
“Thought provoking. . . . Lands its key argument well.”—James
Denselow, New York Journal of Books
“A well-written and insightful examination of a central question in
international relations. . . . A valuable addition to Mearsheimer’s
impressive canon, which is filled with intellectual gems.”—Nayef
Al-Rodhan, Montreal Review
“This is a fascinating book . . . and will provide scholars,
analysts, and policy makers much food for thought.”—John West,
Australian Outlook
“The book’s . . . ambitious reconsideration of rationality . . .
promises to enrich future theorizing across paradigms in
International Relations.”—Junyang Hu, International Affairs
“How States Think is of interest to anyone looking for a systematic
approach to complex strategic and crisis decisions.”—Lagebild
Redaktion
“In this argumentative and cogent book, Mearsheimer and Rosato
argue that rational strategic action requires a credible theory and
a deliberative process. Examining many important decisions
since 1900, they conclude that rational strategic action is normal
but not universal.”—Robert O. Keohane, author of After Hegemony
“Mearsheimer and Rosato show why we should not be too quick to
dismiss policies we dislike as ‘irrational.’ . . . An impressive,
probing, and thought-provoking analysis of a very fundamental
issue.”—Marc Trachtenberg, author of The Craft of International
History
“John Mearsheimer and Sebastian Rosato demonstrate how great powers
jostle relentlessly for national security and expanded power. To
base foreign policy on the view that the opponent is
irrational is to invite debacles such as the war in Ukraine. To
take major actions such as the Iraq War without rational
deliberation is to invite disaster. This is a powerful and
important essay, calling for foreign policy makers of great powers
to undertake rational deliberation and to understand the rational
viewpoint of other great powers.”—Jeffrey D. Sachs, University
Professor at Columbia University
“How States Think takes dead aim at the tendency to see adversaries
and aggressors as inherently ‘irrational.’ Equally important, it
argues that familiar conceptions of rationality are unsuitable for
analyzing most political decisions. It is a book that no serious
international relations scholar will be able to ignore.”—Stephen M.
Walt, Robert and Renee Belfer Professor of International Affairs,
Harvard Kennedy School
“A lively and provocative book. Mearsheimer and Rosato's message is
unflinching: in a world of great uncertainty, the rational leader
will need to rely on a worked-out world view to shape state goals
and actions—even if history shows that strategic rationality
sometimes leads to war, failure, and national self-harm.”—G. John
Ikenberry, author of A World Safe for Democracy
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