The Life of Bertrand RussellThe eloquent and intimate biography of one of the most significant figures of the last century. Bertrand Russell was a British philosopher, logician, mathematician, historian, writer, social critic, political activist and won the Nobel Prize for literature. Born into the high world of the Whig aristocracy, among people for whom Waterloo was still almost a personal memory, Russell lived to inspire the campaign against nuclear warfare. He was imprisoned in 1918 for his Pacifism. Ronald Clark, with access to a mass of material, provides a fascinating and graphic portrait of the man. There is virtually no aspect of Russell's long life to which something new - and often unexpected - is not added by this remarkable and incisive book. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 86
Page
... mind? No matter. What is matter? Never mind.' After some forty or fifty repetitions, the remark ceased to amuse him. What did amuse him, and what he would gleefully recall after more than eighty years, was the occasion on which she had ...
... mind? No matter. What is matter? Never mind.' After some forty or fifty repetitions, the remark ceased to amuse him. What did amuse him, and what he would gleefully recall after more than eighty years, was the occasion on which she had ...
Page
... mind or spirit rather than matter; that all the objects of external perception will dissolve, when subjected to critical scrutiny, like Prospero's gorgeous palaces and solemn temples. For the Hegelian Idealists, the material world was ...
... mind or spirit rather than matter; that all the objects of external perception will dissolve, when subjected to critical scrutiny, like Prospero's gorgeous palaces and solemn temples. For the Hegelian Idealists, the material world was ...
Page
... mind.' He had frequently listened to Hegelian arguments retailed by McTaggart during his first three years at Cambridge, but it was not until his fourth, when he came under the tutelage of George Stout, a man who dedicated his life to ...
... mind.' He had frequently listened to Hegelian arguments retailed by McTaggart during his first three years at Cambridge, but it was not until his fourth, when he came under the tutelage of George Stout, a man who dedicated his life to ...
Page
... mind a belief that the conventional order of things was there to be felled, Appearance and Reality had its own iconoclastic side, avowing in its Preface that 'The chief need of English philosophy is, I think, a sceptical study of first ...
... mind a belief that the conventional order of things was there to be felled, Appearance and Reality had its own iconoclastic side, avowing in its Preface that 'The chief need of English philosophy is, I think, a sceptical study of first ...
Page
... mind, not from modesty, but from a combination of laziness & pride, the same pride that kept thee silent so long about thy real opinions. Turning the other cheek, Alys in London prepared for as simple a wedding as possible. Russell ...
... mind, not from modesty, but from a combination of laziness & pride, the same pride that kept thee silent so long about thy real opinions. Turning the other cheek, Alys in London prepared for as simple a wedding as possible. Russell ...
Contents
Principia Mathematica | |
The New Romantic | |
A Long March Downhill | |
Start of an Experiment | |
End of an Experiment | |
The American Ordeal | |
A Member of the Establishment | |
The Last Attachment | |
Towards a Short War with Russia? | |
Into the New World | |
Ottoline | |
Enter Wittgenstein | |
Ebbing Tide | |
An American Adventure | |
Against the Stream | |
Into Battle | |
Colette | |
From War to Peace | |
TurningPoint | |
The Genesis of Protest | |
The Rise of Ralph Schoenman | |
The Enigmatic Friendship | |
Once More His Own | |
Private Memorandum concerning Ralph | |
Sources and Bibliography | |
Notes and References | |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
agreed Alys American arrived asked atomic Beatrice Webb began believe Bertie Bertrand Russell bomb Britain Cambridge Clifford Allen Colette Committee days later discussed Dora doubt earlier early England fact feel felt Foundation friends Garsington German Gilbert Murray give happy hope human idea intellectual Journal Kingsley Martin Lady lectures letter logic logical atomism London Lord Lucy Donnelly Lytton Strachey Man’s marriage mathematics meeting mind months Moore moral never No-Conscription Fellowship one’s Ottoline’s pacifist paper passion peace Pembroke Lodge Philip Morrell philosophy political possible Principia Principia Mathematica prison problems Ralph Ralph Schoenman replied Russell wrote Russell-Alys Russell-Einstein Manifesto Russell’s Russian Schoenman seems soon Stanley Unwin statement talk things thought told Ottoline Trinity truth University weeks Whitehead wife wish Wittgenstein writing written wrote to Ottoline young