'Bertrand Arthur William Russell, 3rd Earl Russell',
OM,
FRS, (
18 May 1872 –
2 February 1970), was a
Welsh philosopher,
historian,
logician,
mathematician, advocate for social reform,
pacifist, and prominent
atheist.
A prolific
writer, he was also a populariser of
philosophy and a commentator on a large variety of topics. Continuing a family tradition in
political affairs, he was a prominent
anti-war activist, championing free trade between nations and anti-imperialism.
[1][2]
Russell was born at the height of
Britain's economic and political ascendancy. He died of
influenza nearly a century later, at a time when the
British Empire had all but vanished, its power dissipated by two
world wars and the end of the imperial system. As one of the world's best-known
intellectuals, Russell's voice carried great
moral authority, even into his death.
[3] Among his political activities, Russell was a vigorous proponent of
nuclear disarmament and an outspoken
critic of the American military intervention in Vietnam.
In 1950, Russell was made a
Nobel Laureate in
Literature,
"in recognition of his varied and significant writings in which he champions
humanitarian ideals and
freedom of thought".
[4]
Biography
Bertrand Russell was born on
18 May 1872 at
Trellech,
Monmouthshire,
Wales into an
aristocratic family.
Ancestry
His paternal grandfather,
John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, was the second son of
John Russell, 6th Duke of Bedford, and had twice been asked to form a government by
Queen Victoria, serving her as
Prime Minister in the 1840s and 1860s.
The Russells had been prominent for several centuries in Britain before this, coming to power and the peerage with the rise of the
Tudor dynasty. They established themselves as one of Britain's leading
Whig (Liberal) families, and participated in every great political event from the Dissolution of the Monasteries in 1536-40 to the Glorious Revolution in 1688-9 to the Great Reform Act in 1832.
Russell's mother Catherine (née Stanley) was also from an aristocratic family, and was the sister of
Rosalind Howard, Countess of Carlisle.
Russell's parents were quite radical for their times—Russell's father,
Viscount Amberley, was an
atheist and consented to his wife's affair with their children's tutor, the
biologist Douglas Spalding. Both were early advocates of
birth control at a time when this was considered scandalous.
John Stuart Mill, the
Utilitarian philosopher, stood as Russell's
godfather. Mill died the following year, but his writings had a great impact upon Russell's life.
Childhood and adolescence
Russell had two siblings:
Frank (nearly seven years older than Bertrand), and Rachel (four years older). In June 1874 Russell's mother died of
diphtheria, followed shortly by Rachel, and in January 1876 his father also died of
bronchitis following a long period of
depression. Frank and Bertrand were placed in the care of their staunchly
Victorian grandparents, who lived at
Pembroke Lodge in
Richmond Park.
John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, his grandfather, died in 1878, and was remembered by Russell as a kindly old man in a wheelchair. As a result, his widow, the Countess Russell (née Lady Frances Elliot), was the dominant family figure for the rest of Russell's childhood and youth.
The countess was from a
Scottish Presbyterian family, and successfully petitioned a British
court to set aside a provision in Amberley's
will requiring the children to be raised as agnostics. Despite her religious conservatism, she held progressive views in other areas (accepting
Darwinism and supporting
Irish Home Rule), and her influence on Bertrand Russell's outlook on
social justice and standing up for principle remained with him throughout his life - her favourite Bible verse, 'Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do evil.' (Exodus 23:2), became his mantra. However, the atmosphere at Pembroke Lodge was one of frequent prayer, emotional repression and formality - Frank reacted to this with open rebellion, but the young Bertrand learned to hide his feelings.
Russell's
adolescence was thus very lonely, and he often contemplated
suicide. He remarked in his autobiography that his keenest interests were in sex, religion and mathematics, and that only the wish to know more mathematics kept him from suicide
[5]. He was educated at home by a series of tutors,
and he spent countless hours in his grandfather's library.
His brother Frank introduced him to
Euclid, which transformed Russell's life.
University and first marriage
Russell won a scholarship to read for the
Mathematics Tripos at
Trinity College, Cambridge, and commenced his studies there in 1890. He became acquainted with the younger
G.E. Moore and came under the influence of
Alfred North Whitehead, who recommended him to the
Cambridge Apostles. He quickly distinguished himself in mathematics and philosophy, graduating with a B.A. in the former subject in 1893 and adding a fellowship in the latter in 1895.
Russell first met the American
Quaker,
Alys Pearsall Smith, when he was seventeen years old. He became a friend of the Pearsall Smith family -- they knew him primarily as 'Lord John's grandson' and enjoyed showing him off -- and travelled with them to the continent; it was in their company that Bertrand visited the
Paris Exhibition of 1889 and was able to climb the
Eiffel Tower soon after it was completed.
He soon fell in love with the puritanical, high-minded Alys, who was a graduate of
Bryn Mawr College near
Philadelphia, and, contrary to his grandmother's wishes, he married her in December 1894. Their
marriage began to fall apart in 1902 when it occurred to Russell, while he was out on his bicycle, that he no longer loved her; they divorced nineteen years later, after a lengthy period of separation. During this period, Russell had passionate (and often simultaneous) affairs with a number of women, including Lady
Ottoline Morrell and the actress, Lady
Constance Malleson.
Alys pined for him for these years and continued to love Russell for the rest of her life.
Early career
Russell began his published work in 1896 with ''
German Social Democracy'', a study in politics that was an early indication of a lifelong interest in political and social theory. In 1896, he taught German social democracy at the
London School of Economics, where he also lectured on the science of power in the autumn of 1937. He was also a member of the
Coefficients dining club of social reformers set up in 1902 by the
Fabian campaigners
Sidney and
Beatrice Webb.
Russell became a fellow of the
Royal Society in 1908. The first of three volumes of ''
Principia Mathematica'' (written with Whitehead) was published in 1910, which (along with the earlier
''The Principles of Mathematics'') soon made Russell world famous in his field. In 1911, he became acquainted with the Austrian engineering student
Ludwig Wittgenstein, whom he viewed as a genius and a successor who would continue his work on logic. He spent hours dealing with Wittgenstein's various phobias and his frequent bouts of despair. The latter was often a drain on Russell's energy, but he continued to be fascinated by him and encouraged his
academic development, including the publication of Wittgenstein's ''
Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus'' in 1922.
First World War
During the
First World War, Russell engaged in
pacifist activities, and, in 1916, he was dismissed from
Trinity College following his conviction under the
Defence of the Realm Act. A later conviction resulted in six months' imprisonment in
Brixton prison (see ''
Activism'')
Between the wars, and second marriage
In 1920, Russell travelled to
Russia as part of an official delegation sent by the British government to investigate the effects of the
Russian Revolution. During the course of his visit, he met
Lenin and had an hour-long conversation with him. (In his autobiography, he mentions that he found Lenin rather disappointing, and that he sensed an "impish cruelty" in him.) He also cruised down the Volga on a steam-ship. Russell's lover
Dora Black also visited Russia independently at the same time - she was enthusiastic about the revolution, but Russell's experiences destroyed his previous tentative support for it.
Russell subsequently lectured in
Beijing on philosophy for one year, accompanied by Dora. While in China, Russell became gravely ill with
pneumonia, and
incorrect reports of his death were published in the Japanese press. When the couple visited
Japan on their return journey, Dora notified the world that "Mr Bertrand Russell, having died according to the Japanese press, is unable to give interviews to Japanese journalists".
On the couple's return to England in 1921, Dora was five months pregnant, and Russell arranged a hasty divorce from Alys, marrying Dora six days after the divorce was finalised. Their children were
John Conrad Russell, 4th Earl Russell and
Katharine Jane Russell (now Lady Katharine Tait). Russell supported himself during this time by writing popular books explaining matters of
physics,
ethics and
education to the
layman.
Together with Dora, he also founded the experimental
Beacon Hill School in 1927. After he left the school in 1932, Dora continued it until 1943.
Upon the death of his elder brother Frank, in 1931, Russell became the 3rd Earl Russell. He once said that his
title was primarily useful for securing
hotel rooms.
Russell's marriage to Dora grew increasingly tenuous, and it reached a breaking point over her having two children with an American
journalist,
Griffin Barry. In 1936, he took as his third wife an
Oxford undergraduate named Patricia ("Peter") Spence, who had been his children's
governess since the summer of 1930. Russell and Peter had one son,
Conrad Sebastian Robert Russell, later to become a prominent historian, and one of the leading figures in the
Liberal Democrat party.
Second World War
After the Second World War, Russell taught at the
University of Chicago, later moving on to
Los Angeles to lecture at the
University of California, Los Angeles. He was appointed professor at the
City College of New York in 1940, but after a public outcry, the appointment was annulled by a court judgement: his opinions (especially those relating to
sexual morality, detailed in ''Marriage and Morals'' ten years earlier) made him "morally unfit" to teach at the college. The protest was started by the mother of a student who (as a woman) would not have been eligible for his graduate-level course in mathematical logic. Many intellectuals, led by
John Dewey, protested his treatment. Dewey and
Horace M. Kallen edited a collection of articles on the CCNY affair in ''
The Bertrand Russell Case''. He soon joined the
Barnes Foundation, lecturing to a varied audience on the history of philosophy - these lectures formed the basis of ''
A History of Western Philosophy''. His relationship with the eccentric
Albert C. Barnes soon soured, and he returned to Britain in 1944 to rejoin the faculty of Trinity College.
During his return to Britain, by steamship, the Captain of the vessel he was sailing on asked Russell if he had read ''The ABC of Relativity'', which he thought an excellent work. Russell then had the pleasure of telling the Captain who had written it.
Later life
During the 1940s and 1950s, Russell participated in many broadcasts over the
BBC on various topical and philosophical subjects. By this time in his life, Russell was world famous outside of academic circles, frequently the subject or author of
magazine and
newspaper articles, and was called upon to offer up opinions on a wide variety of subjects, even mundane ones. En route to one of his lectures in
Trondheim, Russell survived a
plane crash in Hommelvik October 1948 (24 survivors, 43 on board). ''
A History of Western Philosophy'' (1945) became a best-seller, and provided Russell with a steady income for the remainder of his life. In 1949, Russell was awarded the
Order of Merit, and the following year he was awarded the
Nobel Prize for Literature.
In 1952, Russell was divorced by Peter, with whom he had been very unhappy. Conrad, Russell's son by Peter, did not see his father between the time of the divorce and 1968 (at which time his decision to meet his father caused a permanent breach with his mother). Russell married his fourth wife,
Edith Finch, soon after the divorce, in December 1952. They had known each other since 1926, and Edith had lectured
English at
Bryn Mawr College near
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, sharing a house for twenty years with Russell's old friend Lucy Donnelly. Edith remained with him until his death, and, by all accounts, their relationship was close and loving throughout their marriage. Russell's eldest son, John, suffered from serious
mental illness, which was the source of ongoing disputes between Russell and John's mother, Russell's former wife, Dora. John's wife Susan was also mentally ill, and eventually Russell and Edith became the legal guardians of their three daughters (two of whom were later diagnosed with
schizophrenia).
Political causes
Russell spent the 1950s and 1960s engaged in various political causes, primarily related to nuclear disarmament and opposing the
U.S. invasion of Vietnam. He wrote a great many letters to world leaders during this period. He also became a hero to many of the youthful members of the
New Left. During the 1960s, in particular, Russell became increasingly vocal about his disapproval of what he felt to be the American government's near-genocidal policies. In 1963 he became the inaugural recipient of the
Jerusalem Prize, an award for writers concerned with the freedom of the individual in society.
Final years and death
Bertrand Russell published his three-volume autobiography in 1967, 1968 and in 1969. Although he became frail, he remained lucid until the end.
On
31 January 1970 he condemned "
Israeli aggression in the
Middle East", saying that "We are frequently told that we must sympathize with Israel because of the suffering of the Jews in Europe at the hands of the Nazis. ... What Israel is doing today cannot be condoned, and to invoke the horrors of the past to justify those of the present is gross hypocrisy". This was read out at the International Conference of Parliamentarians in
Cairo on
3 February 1970, along with a notice that Russell had died the previous day.
Bertrand Russell died at 6.30 pm on
2 February 1970 at his home,
Plas Penrhyn, in
Penrhyndeudraeth,
Merionethshire,
Wales of
influenza. He had previously fought that illness off in late December 1969.
His ashes, as his will directed, were scattered after his cremation three days later.
Russell's philosophical work
Analytic philosophy

Cover of the book, ''The Quotable Bertrand Russell''
Russell is generally recognised as one of the founders of
analytic philosophy, even of its several branches. At the beginning of the 20th century, alongside
G. E. Moore, Russell was largely responsible for the British "revolt against
Idealism", a philosophy greatly influenced by
G. W. F. Hegel and his British apostle,
F. H. Bradley. This revolt was echoed 30 years later in
Vienna by the
logical positivists' "revolt against
metaphysics". Russell was particularly critical of a doctrine he ascribed to
idealism and
coherentism, this he dubbed the
doctrine of internal relations, which, Russell suggested, held that in order to know any particular thing, we must know all of its relations. Based on this Russell attempted to show that this would make
space,
time,
science and the concept of
number not fully intelligible. Russell's logical work with
Whitehead continued this project.
Russell and Moore strove to eliminate what they saw as meaningless and incoherent assertions in philosophy, and they sought clarity and precision in argument by the use of exact
language and by breaking down philosophical
propositions into their simplest grammatical components. Russell, in particular, saw formal logic and
science as the principal tools of the philosopher. Indeed, unlike most philosophers who preceded him and his early contemporaries, Russell did not believe there was a separate method for philosophy. He believed that the main task of the philosopher was to illuminate the most general propositions about the
world and to eliminate confusion. In particular, he wanted to end what he saw as the excesses of metaphysics. Russell adopted
William of Ockham's principle against multiplying unnecessary entities,
Occam's Razor, as a central part of the method of analysis.
Logic and philosophy of mathematics
Russell had great influence on modern
mathematical logic. The American philosopher and logician
Willard Quine said Russell's work represented the greatest influence on his own work.
Russell's first mathematical book, ''An Essay on the Foundations of Geometry'', was published in 1897. This work was heavily influenced by
Immanuel Kant. Russell soon realized that the conception it laid out would have made
Albert Einstein's schema of
space-time impossible, which he understood to be superior to his own system. Thenceforth, he rejected the entire
Kantian program as it related to mathematics and
geometry, and he maintained that his own earliest work on the subject was nearly without value.
Interested in the definition of
number, Russell studied the work of
George Boole,
Georg Cantor, and
Augustus De Morgan, while materials in the Bertrand Russell Archives at
McMaster University include notes of his reading in
algebraic logic by
Charles S. Peirce and
Ernst Schröder. He became convinced that the foundations of mathematics were to be found in logic, and following
Gottlob Frege took an
extensionalist approach in which logic was in turn based upon
set theory. In 1900 he attended the first
International Congress of Philosophy in
Paris, where he became familiar with the work of the Italian mathematician,
Giuseppe Peano. He mastered Peano's new symbolism and his set of
axioms for
arithmetic. Peano defined logically all of the terms of these axioms with the exception of ''0'', ''number'', ''successor'', and the singular term, ''the'', which were the primitives of his system. Russell took it upon himself to find logical definitions for each of these. Between 1897 and 1903 he published several articles applying Peano's notation to the classical Boole-Schröder algebra of relations, among them ''On the Notion of Order'', ''Sur la logique des relations avec les applications à la théorie des séries'', and ''On Cardinal Numbers''.
Russell eventually discovered that Gottlob Frege had independently arrived at equivalent definitions for ''0'', ''successor'', and ''number'', and the definition of number is now usually referred to as the Frege-Russell definition. It was largely Russell who brought Frege to the attention of the English-speaking world. He did this in 1903, when he published
''The Principles of Mathematics'', in which the concept of class is inextricably tied to the definition of number. The appendix to this work detailed a paradox arising in Frege's application of second- and higher-order functions which took first-order functions as their arguments, and he offered his first effort to resolve what would henceforth come to be known as the Russell Paradox. Before writing ''Principles'', Russell became aware of Cantor's proof that there was no greatest
cardinal number, which Russell believed was mistaken. The Cantor Paradox in turn was shown (for example by Crossley) to be a special case of the Russell Paradox. This caused Russell to analyze
classes, for it was known that given any number of elements, the number of classes they result in is greater than their number. This in turn led to the discovery of a very interesting class - namely, the class of all classes. It contains two kinds of classes: those classes that contain themselves, and those that do not. Consideration of this class led him to find a fatal flaw in the so-called principle of comprehension, which had been taken for granted by logicians of the time. He showed that it resulted in a contradiction, whereby Y is a member of Y, if and only if, Y is not a member of Y. This has become known as
Russell's paradox, the solution to which he outlined in an appendix to ''Principles'', and which he later developed into a complete theory, the
Theory of types. Aside from exposing a major inconsistency in
naive set theory, Russell's work led directly to the creation of modern
axiomatic set theory. It also crippled Frege's project of reducing arithmetic to logic. The Theory of Types and much of Russell's subsequent work have also found practical applications with
computer science and
information technology.
Russell continued to defend
logicism, the view that mathematics is in some important sense reducible to logic, and along with his former teacher,
Alfred North Whitehead, wrote the monumental ''
Principia Mathematica'', an
axiomatic system on which all of mathematics can be built. The first volume of the ''Principia'' was published in 1910, and is largely ascribed to Russell. More than any other single work, it established the specialty of mathematical or symbolic logic. Two more volumes were published, but their original plan to incorporate geometry in a fourth volume was never realized, and Russell never felt up to improving the original works, though he referenced new developments and problems in his preface to the second edition. Upon completing the ''Principia'', three volumes of extraordinarily
abstract and complex reasoning, Russell was exhausted, and he never felt his intellectual faculties fully recovered from the effort. Although the ''Principia'' did not fall prey to the
paradoxes in Frege's approach, it was later proven by
Kurt Gödel that neither ''Principia Mathematica'', nor any other consistent system of primitive recursive arithmetic, could, within that system, determine that every proposition that could be formulated within that system was decidable, i.e. could decide whether that proposition or its negation was provable within the system (
Gödel's incompleteness theorem).
Russell's last significant work in mathematics and logic, ''Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy'', was written by hand while he was in
jail for his
anti-war activities during
World War I. This was largely an explication of his previous work and its philosophical significance.
Philosophy of language
Russell was not the first philosopher to suggest that language had an important bearing on how we understand the world; however, more than anyone before him, Russell made language, or more specifically, ''how we use language'', a central part of philosophy. Had there been no Russell, it seems unlikely that philosophers such as
Ludwig Wittgenstein,
Gilbert Ryle,
J. L. Austin, and
P. F. Strawson, among others, would have embarked upon the same course, for so much of what they did was to amplify or respond, sometimes critically, to what Russell had said before them, using many of the techniques that he originally developed. Russell, along with Moore, shared the idea that clarity of expression is a virtue, a notion that has been a touchstone for philosophers ever since, particularly among those who deal with the philosophy of language.
Perhaps Russell's most significant contribution to
philosophy of language is his
theory of descriptions, as presented in his seminal essay, ''
On Denoting'', first published in 1905 in the ''
Mind'' philosophical journal, which the mathematician and philosopher
Frank P. Ramsey described as "a paradigm of philosophy." The theory is normally illustrated using the phrase "the present King of France", as in "The present
king of
France is bald." What object is this
proposition ''about'', given that there is not, at present, a king of France? (Roughly the same problem would arise if there were two kings of France at present: which of them does "''the'' king of France" denote?)
Alexius Meinong had suggested that we must posit a realm of "nonexistent entities" that we can suppose we are referring to when we use expressions such as this; but this would be a strange
theory, to say the least.
Frege, employing his distinction between sense and reference, suggested that such sentences, although meaningful, were neither true nor false. But ''some'' such propositions, such as "''If'' the present king of France is bald, ''then'' the present king of France has no hair on his head," seem not only truth-valuable but indeed obviously true.
The problem is general to what are called "
definite descriptions." Normally this includes all terms beginning with "the", and sometimes includes names, like "Walter Scott." (This point is quite contentious: Russell sometimes thought that the latter terms shouldn't be called names at all, but only "disguised definite descriptions," but much subsequent work has treated them as altogether different things.) What is the "logical form" of definite descriptions: how, in Frege's terms, could we paraphrase them in order to show how the
truth of the whole depends on the truths of the parts? Definite descriptions appear to be like names that by their very nature denote exactly one thing, neither more or less. What, then, are we to say about the proposition as a whole if one of its parts apparently isn't functioning correctly?
Russell's
solution was, first of all, to analyze not the term alone but the entire proposition that contained a definite description. "The present king of France is bald," he then suggested, can be reworded to "There is an x such that x is a present king of France, nothing other than x is a present king of France, and x is bald." Russell claimed that each definite description in fact contains a claim of
existence and a claim of uniqueness which give this appearance, but these can be broken apart and treated separately from the predication that is the obvious content of the proposition. The proposition as a whole then says three things about some object: the definite description contains two of them, and the rest of the
sentence contains the other. If the object does not exist, or if it is not unique, then the whole sentence turns out to be
false, not meaningless.
One of the major complaints against Russell's theory, due originally to Strawson, is that definite descriptions do not claim that their object exists, they merely presuppose that it does.
Wittgenstein, Russell's student, achieved considerable prominence in the philosophy of language after the posthumous publication of the ''
Philosophical Investigations''. In Russell's opinion, Wittgenstein's later work was misguided, and he decried its influence and that of its followers (especially members of the so-called "Oxford school" of
ordinary language philosophy, whom he believed were promoting a kind of
mysticism). However, Russell still held Wittgenstein and his early work in high regard, he thought of him as, "perhaps the most perfect example I have ever known of genius as traditionally conceived, passionate, profound, intense, and dominating." Russell's belief that philosophy's task is not limited to examining ordinary language is once again widely accepted in philosophy.
Logical atomism
Perhaps Russell's most systematic, metaphysical treatment of philosophical analysis and his empiricist-centric logicism is evident in what he called
Logical atomism, which is explicated in a set of
lectures, "The Philosophy of Logical Atomism," which he gave in 1918. In these lectures, Russell sets forth his
concept of an
ideal,
isomorphic language, one that would mirror the world, whereby our knowledge can be reduced to terms of propositions and their
truth-functional compounds. Logical atomism is a form of radical empiricism, for Russell believed the most important requirement for such an ideal language is that every meaningful proposition must consist of terms referring directly to the objects with which we are acquainted, or that they are defined by other terms referring to objects with which we are acquainted. Russell excluded certain formal, logical terms such as ''all'', ''the'', ''is'', and so forth, from his isomorphic requirement, but he was never entirely satisfied about our understanding of such terms. One of the central themes of Russell's atomism is that the world consists of logically independent facts, a plurality of facts, and that our knowledge depends on the data of our direct experience of them. In his later life, Russell came to doubt aspects of logical atomism, especially his principle of isomorphism, though he continued to believe that the process of philosophy ought to consist of breaking things down into their simplest components, even though we might not ever fully arrive at an ultimate
fact.
Epistemology
Russell's
epistemology went through many phases. Once he shed
neo-Hegelianism in his early years, Russell remained a
philosophical realist for the remainder of his life, believing that our direct experiences have primacy in the acquisition of knowledge. While some of his views have lost favour, his influence remains strong in the distinction between two ways in which we can be familiar with objects: "
knowledge by acquaintance" and "
knowledge by description". For a time, Russell thought that we could only be acquainted with our own
sense data—momentary
perceptions of
colours,
sounds, and the like—and that everything else, including the
physical objects that these were sense data ''of'', could only be inferred, or reasoned to—i.e. known by description—and not known directly. This distinction has gained much wider application, though Russell eventually rejected the idea of an intermediate sense datum.
In his later philosophy, Russell subscribed to a kind of
neutral monism, maintaining that the distinctions between the
material and
mental worlds, in the final analysis, were arbitrary, and that both can be reduced to a neutral property—a view similar to one held by the American philosopher/psychologist,
William James, and one that was first formulated by
Baruch Spinoza, whom Russell greatly admired. Instead of James' "pure experience", however, Russell characterised the stuff of our initial states of perception as "events", a stance which is curiously akin to his old teacher
Whitehead's process philosophy.
Philosophy of science
Russell frequently claimed that he was more convinced of his ''method'' of doing philosophy, the method of analysis, than of his philosophical conclusions. Science, of course, was one of the principal components of analysis, along with logic and mathematics. While Russell was a believer in the
scientific method, knowledge derived from
empirical research that is verified through repeated testing, he believed that science reaches only tentative answers, and that scientific progress is piecemeal, and attempts to find organic unities were largely futile. Indeed, he believed the same was true of philosophy. Another founder of
modern philosophy of science,
Ernst Mach, placed less reliance on method, per se, for he believed that any method that produced predictable results was satisfactory and that the principal role of the
scientist was to make successful
predictions. While Russell would doubtless agree with this as a practical matter, he believed that the ultimate objective of ''both'' science and philosophy was to ''understand''
reality, not simply to make predictions.
The fact that Russell made science a central part of his method and of philosophy was instrumental in making the
philosophy of science a full-blooded, separate branch of philosophy and an area in which subsequent philosophers specialised. Much of Russell's thinking about science is expressed in his 1914 book, ''Our Knowledge of the External World as a Field for Scientific Method in Philosophy''. Among the several schools that were influenced by Russell were the
logical positivists, particularly
Rudolph Carnap, who maintained that the distinguishing feature of scientific propositions was their verifiability. This contrasted with the theory of
Karl Popper, also greatly influenced by Russell, who believed that their importance rested in the fact that they were ''potentially'' falsifiable.
It is worth noting that outside of his strictly philosophical pursuits, Russell was always fascinated by science, particularly
physics, and he even authored several popular science books, ''The ABC of Atoms'' (1923) and ''The ABC of Relativity'' (1925).
Ethics
While Russell wrote a great deal on
ethical subject matters, he did not believe that the subject belonged to philosophy or that when he wrote on ethics that he did so in his capacity as a philosopher. In his earlier years, Russell was greatly influenced by
G.E. Moore's ''
Principia Ethica''. Along with Moore, he then believed that moral facts were
objective, but known only through
intuition; that they were simple properties of objects, not
equivalent (e.g., pleasure is good) to the natural objects to which they are often ascribed (see
Naturalistic fallacy); and that these simple, undefinable moral properties cannot be analyzed using the non-moral properties with which they are associated. In time, however, he came to agree with his philosophical hero,
David Hume, who believed that ethical terms dealt with
subjective values that cannot be verified in the same way as matters of fact.
Coupled with Russell's other doctrines, this influenced the
logical positivists, who formulated the theory of
emotivism or
cognitivism, which states that ethical propositions (along with those of
metaphysics) were essentially meaningless and nonsensical or, at best, little more than expressions of
attitudes and
preferences. Notwithstanding his influence on them, Russell himself did not construe ethical propositions as narrowly as the positivists, for he believed that ethical considerations are not only meaningful, but that they are a vital subject matter for civil discourse. Indeed, though Russell was often characterised as the
patron saint of rationality, he agreed with Hume, who said that reason ought to be subordinate to ethical considerations.
Religion and theology
For most of his adult life Russell maintained that
religion is little more than
superstition and, despite any positive effects that religion might have, it is largely harmful to people. He believed religion and the religious outlook (he considered
communism and other systematic
ideologies to be forms of religion) serve to impede knowledge, foster fear and dependency, and are responsible for much of the war, oppression, and misery that have beset the world.
In his 1949 speech, "Am I an Atheist or an Agnostic?", Russell expressed his difficulty over whether to call himself an
atheist or an
agnostic:
Though he would later question God's existence, he fully accepted the
ontological argument during his
undergraduate years:
This quote has been used by many theologians over the years, such as by
Louis Pojman in his ''Philosophy of Religion'', who wish for readers to believe that even a well-known atheist-philosopher supported this particular argument for God's existence. However, such theologians should note that, elsewhere in his autobiography, Russell mentions the following:
They should also consider that this period of Russell's life was over a decade before
Einstein framed
Special Relativity in 1905, and well before the
Big Bang Theory was formulated or considered intellectually respectable.
Russell made an influential analysis of the
omphalos hypothesis enunciated by
Philip Henry Gosse—that any argument suggesting that the world was created as if it were already in motion could just as easily make it a few minutes old as a few thousand years:
As a young man, Russell had a decidedly religious bent, himself, as is evident in his early
Platonism. He longed for
eternal truths, as he makes clear in his famous essay, "A Free Man's Worship", widely regarded as a masterpiece of prose, but a work that Russell came to dislike. While he rejected the
supernatural, he freely admitted that he yearned for a deeper meaning to life.
Russell's views on religion can be found in his popular book, ''
Why I Am Not a Christian and Other Essays on Religion and Related Subjects'' (ISBN 0-671-20323-1). Its title essay was a talk given on
March 6,
1927 at Battersea Town Hall, under the auspices of the South London Branch of the
National Secular Society, UK, and published later that year as a
pamphlet. The book also contains other essays in which Russell considers a number of logical arguments for the
existence of God, including the
first cause argument, the
natural-law argument, the
argument from design, and moral arguments. He also discusses specifics about
Christian theology.
His conclusion:
Influence on philosophy
Russell had a major influence on modern philosophy, especially in the
English-speaking world. While others were also influential, notably Frege, Moore, and Wittgenstein, Russell made analysis the dominant methodology of professional philosophy. The various analytic movements throughout the last century all owe something to Russell's earlier works.
Russell's influence on individual philosophers is singular, perhaps most notably in the case of
Ludwig Wittgenstein, who was his student between 1911 and 1914. It should also be observed that Wittgenstein exerted considerable influence on Russell, especially in leading him to conclude, much to his regret, that mathematical truths were purely tautological truths. Evidence of Russell's influence on Wittgenstein can be seen throughout the
Tractatus, which Russell was instrumental in having published. Russell also helped to secure Wittgenstein's
doctorate and a faculty position at
Cambridge, along with several fellowships along the way. However, as previously stated, he came to disagree with Wittgenstein's later linguistic and analytic approach to philosophy, while Wittgenstein came to think of Russell as "superficial and glib", particularly in his popular writings. Russell's influence is also evident in the work of
A. J. Ayer,
Rudolf Carnap,
Alonzo Church,
Kurt Gödel,
David Kaplan,
Saul Kripke,
Karl Popper,
W. V. Quine,
John R. Searle, and a number of other philosophers and logicians.
Some see Russell's influence as mostly negative, primarily those who have been critical of Russell's emphasis on science and logic, the consequent diminishing of metaphysics, and of his insistence that ethics lies outside of philosophy. Russell's admirers and detractors are often more acquainted with his pronouncements on social and political matters, or what some (e.g., biographer
Ray Monk) have called his "
journalism", than they are with his technical, philosophical work. There is a marked tendency to conflate these matters, and to judge Russell the philosopher on what he himself would certainly consider to be his non-philosophical opinions. Russell often cautioned people to make this distinction.
Russell left a large assortment of writing. From his adolescent years, Russell wrote about 3,000 words a day, in long hand, with relatively few corrections; his first draft nearly always was his last draft, even on the most complex, technical matters. His previously unpublished work is an immense treasure trove, and scholars are continuing to gain new insights into Russell's thought.
Russell had this to say about
Sikhism. "That if some lucky men survive the onslaught of the third world war of atomic and hydrogen bombs, then the
Sikh religion will be the only means of guiding them." Russell was asked that he was talking about the third world war, but isn't this religion capable of guiding mankind before the third world war? In reply, Russell said, "Yes, it has the capability, but the Sikhs have not brought out in the broad daylight, the splendid doctrines of this religion which has come into existence for the benefit of the entire mankind. This is their greatest sin and the Sikhs cannot be freed of it."
Russell's activism
Political and social
activism occupied much of Russell's time for most of his long life, which makes his prodigious and seminal writing on a wide range of technical and non-technical subjects all the more remarkable.
Russell remained politically active to the end, writing and exhorting world leaders and lending his name to various causes. Some maintain that during his last few years he gave his youthful followers too much license and that they used his name for some outlandish purposes that a more attentive Russell would not have approved. There is evidence to show that he became aware of this when he fired his private secretary,
Ralph Schoenman, then a young firebrand of the radical left.
Pacifism, war and nuclear weapons
"War does not determine who is right, only who is left."
Russell was never a complete
pacifist; in his 1915 article on "
The Ethics of War", he defended wars of colonization on utilitarian grounds when the side with the more advanced civilization could put the land to better use. However, Russell opposed nearly all wars between modern nations. His activism against British participation in
World War I led to fines and the loss of his fellowship at
Trinity College,
Cambridge. He was sentenced to prison for counselling young men on how to avoid conscription. He was released after six months, with the curious stipulation that he must not go within one mile of England's shoreline. In 1943 Russell called his stance "relative political pacifism"—he held that war was always a great
evil, but in some particularly extreme circumstances (such as when
Adolf Hitler threatened to take over Europe) it might be a lesser of multiple evils. In the years leading to
World War II, he supported the policy of
appeasement; but by 1940 he acknowledged that in order to preserve democracy,
Hitler had to be defeated. This same reluctant value compromise was shared with his acquaintance
A.A. Milne.
Russell was opposed to the use and possession of nuclear weapons for most of their existence, but he may not have always been of that opinion. On November 20, 1948,
in a public speech at
Westminster School, addressing a gathering arranged by the New Commonwealth, Russell shocked some observers with comments that seemed to suggest a
preemptive nuclear strike on the
Soviet Union might be justified. Russell apparently argued that the threat of war between the
United States and the
Soviet Union would enable the United States to force the Soviet Union to accept the
Baruch Plan for international atomic energy control. (Earlier in the year he had written in the same vein to
Walter W. Marseille.) Russell felt this plan "had very great merits and showed considerable generosity, when it is remembered that America still had an unbroken nuclear monopoly." (''Has Man a Future?'', 1961). However Nicholas Griffin of McMaster University, in his book ''The Selected Letters of Bertrand Russell: The Public Years, 1914-1970'', has claimed (after obtaining a transcript of the speech) that Russell's wording implies he didn't advocate the actual use of the atom bomb, but merely its diplomatic use as a massive source of leverage over the actions of the Soviets. Griffin's interpretation was disputed by
Nigel Lawson, the former British Chancellor, who was present at the speech and who claims it was quite clear to the audience that Russell was advocating an actual First Strike. Whichever interpretation is correct, Russell later relented, instead arguing for mutual disarmament by the nuclear powers, possibly linked to some form of
world government.
In 1962 during the
Cuban Missile Crisis Russell sent telegrams to
Kennedy,
Khrushchev, the
UN Secretary-General U Thant and British prime minister
Macmillan, which may have helped to prevent further escalation and a possible nuclear war. Khrushchev replied with a long letter, published by the Russian news agency
ITAR-TASS, which was mainly addressed to Kennedy and the Western world.
[6]
In 1955 Russell released the
Russell-Einstein Manifesto, co-signed by
Albert Einstein and nine other leading scientists and intellectuals, a document which led to the first of the
Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs in 1957. In 1958, Russell became the first president of the
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. He resigned two years later when the CND would not support
civil disobedience, and formed the
Committee of 100. In 1961, when he was in his late eighties, he was imprisoned for a week for inciting civil disobedience, in connection with protests at the
Ministry of Defence and
Hyde Park.
Increasingly concerned about the potential danger to humanity arising from nuclear weapons and other scientific discoveries, he also joined with Einstein, Oppenheimer, Rotblat and other eminent scientists of the day to establish the
World Academy of Art and Science which was formally constituted in 1960.
Russell made a cameo appearance playing himself in the anti-war
Bollywood film "
Aman" which was released in India in 1967. This was Russell's only appearance in a feature film.
The
Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation began work in 1963, in order to carry forward Russell's work for peace, human rights and social justice. He began public opposition to U.S. policy in Vietnam with a letter to the
New York Times dated March 28, 1963. By the autumn of 1966 he had completed the manuscript of "War Crimes in Vietnam". Then, using the American justifications for the Nuremberg Trials, Russell, along with
Jean-Paul Sartre, organised what he called an international War Crimes Tribunal, a.k.a the
Russell Tribunal.
Russell was an early critic of the official story in the
John F. Kennedy assassination; his "
16 Questions on the Assassination" from 1964 is still considered a good summary of the apparent inconsistencies in that case.
Communism and socialism
Russell initially expressed great hope in "the Communist experiment". However, when he visited the
Soviet Union and met
Lenin in 1920, he was unimpressed with the system in place. On his return he wrote a critical tract,
The Practice and Theory of Bolshevism. He was "infinitely unhappy in this atmosphere—stifled by its utilitarianism, its indifference to love and beauty and the life of impulse." He believed Lenin to be similar to a religious
zealot, cold and possessed of "no love of liberty."
Politically, Russell envisioned a kind of benevolent,
libertarian socialism, similar in some ways to, yet possessing important differences from, the conception promoted by the
Fabian Society. He was strongly critical of
Stalin's regime, and of the practices of states proclaiming
Marxism and
Communism generally. Russell was a consistent enthusiast for democracy and
world government, and advocated the establishment of a democratic international government in some of the essays collected in ''In Praise of Idleness'' (1935), and also in ''Has Man a Future?'' (1961).
Women's suffrage
As a young man, Russell was a member of the
Liberal Party and wrote in favor of
free trade and
women's suffrage. In his 1910 pamphlet, ''Anti-Suffragist Anxieties'', Russell wrote that some men opposed suffrage because they "fear that their liberty to act in ways that are injurious to women will be curtailed." In 1907 he was nominated by the National Union of Suffrage Societies to run for
Parliament in a
by-election, which he lost by a wide margin.
Sexuality
Russell wrote against
Victorian notions of morality. ''
Marriage and Morals'' (1929) expressed his opinion that sex between a man and woman who are not married to each other is not necessarily immoral if they truly love one another, and advocated "trial marriages" or "companionate marriage", formalised relationships whereby young people could legitimately have sexual intercourse without being expected to remain married in the long term or to have children (an idea first proposed by Judge
Ben Lindsey). This might not seem extreme by today's standards, but it was enough to raise vigorous protests and denunciations against him during his visit to the
United States shortly after the book's publication. Russell was also ahead of his time in advocating open
sex education and widespread access to
contraception. He also advocated easy
divorce, but only if the marriage had produced no children - Russell's view was that parents should remain married but tolerant of each other's sexual infidelity, if they had children. This reflected his life at the time - his second wife Dora was openly having an affair, and would soon become pregnant by another man, but Russell was keen for their children John and Kate to have a "normal" family life.
Russell was also active within the
Homosexual Law Reform Society, being one of the signatories of
Anthony Edward Dyson's letter calling for a change in the law regarding homosexual practices.
Russell's private life was even more unconventional and freewheeling than his published writings revealed, but that was not well known at the time. For example, philosopher
Sidney Hook reports that Russell often spoke of his
sexual prowess and of his various conquests.
Race
As with his views on religion, which developed considerably throughout his long life, Russell's views on the matter of race did not remain fixed. By 1951,
Russell was a vocal advocate of racial equality and intermarriage; he penned a chapter on "Racial Antagonism" in ''New Hopes for a Changing World'' (1951), which read:
Passages in some of his early writings support
birth control. On November 16, 1922, for instance, he gave a lecture to the General Meeting of Dr.
Marie Stopes's Society for Constructive Birth Control and Racial Progress on "Birth Control and International Relations," in which he described the importance of extending Western birth control worldwide; his remarks anticipated the population control movement of the 1960s and the role of the United Nations.
Another passage from early editions of his book ''Marriage and Morals'' (1929), which Russell later clarified as referring only to the situation as resulting from environmental conditioning, and which he had removed from later editions, reads:
Russell later criticized eugenic programs for their vulnerability to corruption, and, in 1932, he condemned the "unwarranted assumption" that "Negroes are congenitally inferior to white men" (''Education and the Social Order'', Chap. 3).
Responding in 1964 to a correspondent's enquiry, "do you still consider the Negroes an inferior race, as you did when you wrote ''Marriage and Morals''?", Russell replied:
Further reading
Selected bibliography of Russell's books
This is a selected bibliography of Russell's books in English sorted by year of first publication.
★ 1896, ''German Social Democracy'', London: Longmans, Green.
★ 1897, ''An Essay on the Foundations of Geometry'', Cambridge: At the University Press.
★ 1900, ''A Critical Exposition of the Philosophy of Leibniz'', Cambridge: At the University Press.
★ 1903,
''The Principles of Mathematics'', Cambridge: At the University Press.
★ 1905 ''
On Denoting'', Mind vol. 14, NS, ISSN: 00264425, Basil Blackwell
★ 1910, ''Philosophical Essays'', London: Longmans, Green.
★ 1910–1913, ''
Principia Mathematica'' (with
Alfred North Whitehead), 3 vols., Cambridge: At the University Press.
★ 1912, ''
The Problems of Philosophy'', London: Williams and Norgate.
★ 1914, ''Our Knowledge of the External World as a Field for Scientific Method in Philosophy'', Chicago and London: Open Court Publishing.
★ 1916, ''Principles of Social Reconstruction'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1916, ''Justice in War-time'', Chicago: Open Court.
★ 1917,
''Political Ideals'', New York: The Century Co.
★ 1918, ''Mysticism and Logic and Other Essays'', London: Longmans, Green.
★ 1918, ''Roads to Freedom: Socialism, Anarchism, and Syndicalism'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1919,
''Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy'', London: George Allen & Unwin, (ISBN 0-415-09604-9 for Routledge paperback).
★ 1920,
''The Practice and Theory of Bolshevism'',London: George Allen & Unwin
★ 1921,
''The Analysis of Mind'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1922,
''The Problem of China'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1923, ''The Prospects of Industrial Civilization'' (in collaboration with Dora Russell), London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1923, ''The ABC of Atoms'', London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner.
★ 1924, ''Icarus, or the Future of Science'', London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner.
★ 1925, ''The ABC of Relativity'', London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner.
★ 1925, ''
What I Believe'', London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner.
★ 1926, ''On Education, Especially in Early Childhood'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1927, ''The Analysis of Matter'', London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner.
★ 1927, ''An Outline of Philosophy'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1927, ''
Why I Am Not a Christian'', London: Watts.
★ 1927, ''Selected Papers of Bertrand Russell'', New York: Modern Library.
★ 1928, ''Sceptical Essays'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1929, ''Marriage and Morals'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1930, ''The Conquest of Happiness'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1931, ''The Scientific Outlook'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1932, ''Education and the Social Order'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1934, ''Freedom and Organization, 1814–1914'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1935, ''In Praise of Idleness'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1935, ''Religion and Science'', London: Thornton Butterworth.
★ 1936, ''Which Way to Peace?'', London: Jonathan Cape.
★ 1937, ''The Amberley Papers: The Letters and Diaries of Lord and Lady Amberley'' (with Patricia Russell), 2 vols., London: Leonard & Virginia Woolf at the Hogarth Press.
★ 1938, '', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1940, ''An Inquiry into Meaning and Truth'', New York: W. W. Norton & Company.
★ 1946, ''
A History of Western Philosophy and Its Connection with Political and Social Circumstances from the Earliest Times to the Present Day'', New York: Simon and Schuster.
★ 1948, ''Human Knowledge: Its Scope and Limits'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1949, ''Authority and the Individual'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1950, ''Unpopular Essays'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1951, ''New Hopes for a Changing World'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1952, ''The Impact of Science on Society'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1953, ''Satan in the Suburbs and Other Stories'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1954, ''Human Society in Ethics and Politics'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1954, ''Nightmares of Eminent Persons and Other Stories'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1956, ''Portraits from Memory and Other Essays'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1956, ''Logic and Knowledge: Essays 1901–1950'' (edited by Robert C. Marsh), London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1957, ''Why I Am Not A Christian and Other Essays on Religion and Related Subjects'' (edited by Paul Edwards), London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1958, ''Understanding History and Other Essays'', New York: Philosophical Library.
★ 1959, ''Common Sense and Nuclear Warfare'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1959, ''
My Philosophical Development'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1959, ''Wisdom of the West'' ("editor", Paul Foulkes), London: Macdonald.
★ 1960, ''Bertrand Russell Speaks His Mind'', Cleveland and New York: World Publishing Company.
★ 1961, ''The Basic Writings of Bertrand Russell'' (edited by R.E. Egner and L.E. Denonn), London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1961, ''Fact and Fiction'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1961, ''Has Man a Future?'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1963, ''Essays in Skepticism'', New York: Philosophical Library.
★ 1963, ''Unarmed Victory'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1965, ''On the Philosophy of Science'' (edited by Charles A. Fritz, Jr.), Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Company.
★ 1967, ''Russell's Peace Appeals'' (edited by Tsutomu Makino and Kazuteru Hitaka), Japan: Eichosha's New Current Books.
★ 1967, ''War Crimes in Vietnam'', London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1967–1969, ''The Autobiography of Bertrand Russell'', 3 vols., London: George Allen & Unwin.
★ 1969, ''Dear Bertrand Russell... A Selection of his Correspondence with the General Public 1950–1968'' (edited by Barry Feinberg and Ronald Kasrils), London: George Allen and Unwin.
Note: This is a mere sampling, for Russell also authored many pamphlets, introductions, articles and letters to the editor. His works also can be found in any number of anthologies and collections, perhaps most notably, ''The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell'', which
McMaster University began publishing in 1983. This collection of his shorter and previously unpublished works is now up to 16 volumes, and many more are forthcoming. An additional 3 volumes catalogue just his bibliography. The Russell Archives at
McMaster also have more than 30,000 letters that he wrote.
Additional References:
A. Russell
★ 1900, ''Sur la logique des relations avec des applications à la théorie des séries'', ''Rivista di matematica 7'': 115-148.
★ 1901, ''On the Notion of Order'', ''Mind (n.s.) 10'': 35-51.
★ 1902, (with
Alfred North Whitehead), ''On Cardinal Numbers'', ''American Journal of Mathematics 23'': 367-384.
B. Secondary references:
★ John Newsome Crossley. ''A Note on Cantor's Theorem and Russell's Paradox'', ''Australian Journal of Philosophy 51'': 70-71.
★
Ivor Grattan-Guinness, 2000. ''The Search for Mathematical Roots 1870-1940''. Princeton University Press.
Books about Russell's philosophy
★ ''Bertrand Russell: Critical Assessments'', edited by A. D. Irvine, 4 volumes, London: Routledge, 1999. Consists of essays on Russell's work by many distinguished philosophers.
★ ''Bertrand Russell'', by John Slater, Bristol: Thoemmes Press, 1994.
★ ''The Philosophy of Bertrand Russell'', edited by P.A. Schilpp, Evanston and Chicago: Northwestern University, 1944.
★ ''Russell'', by A. J. Ayer, London: Fontana, 1972. ISBN 0-00-632965-9. A lucid summary exposition of Russell's thought.
★ ''The Lost Cause: Causation and the Mind-Body Problem'', by
Celia Green. Oxford: Oxford Forum, 2003. ISBN 0-9536772-1-4 Contains a sympathetic analysis of Russell's views on
causality.
Biographical books
★ '' Bertrand Russell: 1872–1920 The Spirit of Solitude'' by
Ray Monk (1997) ISBN 0-09-973131-2
★ ''Bertrand Russell: 1921–1970 The Ghost of Madness'' by
Ray Monk (2001) ISBN 0-09-927275-X
★ ''Bertrand Russell: Philosopher and Humanist'', by
John Lewis (1968)
★ ''Bertrand Russell'', by
A. J. Ayer (1972), reprint ed. 1988: ISBN 0-226-03343-0
★ ''The Life of Bertrand Russell'', by
Ronald W. Clark (1975) ISBN 0-394-49059-2
★ ''Bertrand Russell and His World'', by Ronald W. Clark (1981) ISBN 0-500-13070-1
References
1. From Imperialism to Free Trade: Couturat, Halevy and Russell's First Crusade, Richard Rempel, , , Journal of the History of Ideas, 1979
2. Political Ideals, Bertrand Russell, , , Routledge, 1988, ISBN 0-415-10907-8
3. http://russell.mcmaster.ca/~bertrand/
4. The Nobel Foundation (1950). Bertrand Russell: The Nobel Prize in Literature 1950. Retrieved on June 11, 2007.
5. ''The Autobiography of Bertrand Russell'', p.38
6. Die Krise der Männlichkeit in der unerwachsenen Gesellschaft, Horst-Eberhard Richter, , , Psychosozial-Verlag, 2006, ISBN 3898065707
External links
Writings available online
★
★
"Mysticism" (1961)
★
"A Free Man's Worship" (1903)
★
"Am I an Atheist or an Agnostic?" (1947)
★
"Icarus, or The Future of Science" 1923
★
"Has Religion Made Useful Contributions to Civilization?" 1930
★
"Ideas that Have Harmed Mankind" (1950)
★
"In Praise of Idleness" (1932)
★
"What Desires Are Politically Important?" (1950)
★
''Political Ideals'' (1917)
★
''The Problem of China''
★
''The Problems of Philosophy''
★
''Proposed Roads to Freedom'' (1918)
★
"16 Questions on the Assassination" (of President Kennedy)
★
''The Analysis Of Mind''
★
''What is an Agnostic?''
★
''Why I am not a Christian''
★
The War and Non-Resistance—A Rejoinder to Professor Perry
★
War and Non-Resistance (1915)
★
The Ethics of War (1915)
★
''Principia Mathematica'' (1910)
★
"The Elements of Ethics" (1910)
★
''The Principles of Mathematics'' (1903)
★
''An essay on the foundations of geometry''
★ From:
www.archive.org
★
★
''History of Western Philosophy'' (1946)
★
★
''My Philosophical Development'' (1959)
★
★
''Portraits from Memory and Other Essays'' (1956)
★
★
''Unpopular Essays'' (1950)
★
★
''Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy'' (1920)
★
★
''The Scientific Outlook'' (1954)
★
★
''An Outline of Philosophy'' (1951)
★
★
''Common Sense and Nuclear Warfare'' (1959)
★
★
''Our Knowledge of the External World'' (1914)
★
★
''Legitimacy Versus Industrialism 1814-1848'' (1935)
★
★
''Authority and the Individual'' (1949)
★
★
''Education and the Social Order'' (1932)
★
★
''Nightmares of Eminent Persons and Other Stories'' (1954)
★
★
''Why Men Fight: A Method of Abolishing the International Duel'' (1917)
★
★
''Justice in Wartime'' (1917)
★
★
''Mysticism and Logic and Other Essays'' (1917)
Audio
★
Bertrand Russell Audio Archive
Other
★
RussellWiki - A wiki dedicated to covering topics related to Bertrand Russell
★
Pembroke Lodge - childhood home and museum
★
The Bertrand Russell Society - a member organisation of the
International Humanist and Ethical Union
★
The Bertrand Russell Society Quarterly
★
The Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation
★
Bertrand Russell in Japan
★
★
Biography and quotes of Bertrand Russell
★
Russell Photo Gallery
★
Photographs at the
National Portrait Gallery
★
''Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy'' entry
★
The Bertrand Russell Archives
★
Resource list
★
The First Reith Lecture given by Russell (Real Audio)
★
Encyclopaedia Britannica
★
Nobel Prize
★
Listen to an audio excerpt from "The Problems with Philosophy" by Bertrand Russell Free mp3 downloads from
ThoughtAudio.com
★
Russell immediate family
★
Biography resources dedicated to Bertrand Russell
Succession