Russell, Bertrand
Arthur William, 3rd Earl Russell (1872-1970), British philosopher, mathematician,
and Nobel laureate, whose emphasis on logical analysis influenced the course
of 20th-century philosophy.
Born in Trelleck, Wales, on May 18, 1872, Russell was educated at Trinity
College, University of Cambridge. After graduation in 1894, he traveled
in France, Germany, and the United States and was then made a fellow of
Trinity College. From an early age he developed a strong sense of social
consciousness; at the same time, he involved himself in the study of logical
and mathematical questions, which he had made his special fields and on
which he was called to lecture at many institutions throughout the world.
He achieved prominence with his first major work, The Principles of Mathematics
(1902), in which he attempted to remove mathematics from the realm of abstract
philosophical notions and to give it a precise scientific framework.
Russell then collaborated for eight years with the British philosopher
and mathematician Alfred North Whitehead to produce the monumental work
Principia Mathematica (3 volumes, 1910-1913). This work showed that mathematics
can be stated in terms of the concepts of general logic, such as class
and membership in a class. It became a masterpiece of rational thought.
Russell and Whitehead proved that numbers can be defined as classes of
a certain type, and in the process they developed logic concepts and a
logic notation that established symbolic logic as an important specialization
within the field of philosophy. In his next major work, The Problems of
Philosophy (1912), Russell borrowed from the fields of sociology, psychology,
physics, and mathematics to refute the tenets of idealism, the dominant
philosophical school of the period, which held that all objects and experiences
are the product of the intellect. Russell, a realist, believed that objects
perceived by the senses have an inherent reality independent of the mind.
Pacifist and Socialist
Russell condemned both sides in World War I (1914-1918), and for his
uncompromising stand he was fined, imprisoned, and deprived of his teaching
post at Cambridge. In prison he wrote Introduction to Mathematical Philosophy
(1919), combining the two areas of knowledge he regarded as inseparable.
After the war he visited the Russian Soviet Federated Socialist Republic,
and in his book Practice and Theory of Bolshevism (1920) he expressed his
disappointment with the form of socialism practiced there. He felt that
the methods used to achieve a Communist system were intolerable and that
the results obtained were not worth the price paid.
Russell taught at Beijing University in China during 1921 and 1922.
From 1928 to 1932, after he returned to England, he conducted the private,
highly progressive Beacon Hill School for young children. From 1938 to
1944 he taught at various educational institutions in the United States.
He was barred, however, from teaching at the College of the City of New
York (now City College of the City University of New York) by the state
supreme court because of his attacks on religion in such works as What
I Believe (1925) and his advocacy of sexual freedom, expressed in Manners
and Morals (1929).
Russell returned to England in 1944 and was reinstated as a fellow
of Trinity College. Although he abandoned pacifism to support the Allied
cause in World War II (1939-1945), he became an ardent and active opponent
of nuclear weapons. In 1949 he was awarded the Order of Merit by King George
VI. Russell received the 1950 Nobel Prize for Literature and was cited
as "the champion of humanity and freedom of thought." He led a movement
in the late 1950s advocating unilateral nuclear disarmament by Great Britain,
and at the age of 89 he was imprisoned after an antinuclear demonstration.
He died on February 2, 1970.
Philosopher and Author
In addition to his earlier work, Russell also made a major contribution
to the development of logical positivism, a strong philosophical movement
of the 1930s and 1940s. The major Austrian philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein,
at one time Russell's student at Cambridge, was strongly influenced by
his original concept of logical atomism. In his search for the nature and
limits of knowledge, Russell was a leader in the revival of the philosophy
of empiricism in the larger field of epistemology. In Our Knowledge of
the External World (1926) and Inquiry into Meaning and Truth (1962), he
attempted to explain all factual knowledge as constructed out of immediate
experiences. Among his other books are The ABC of Relativity (1925), Education
and the Social Order (1932), A History of Western Philosophy (1945), The
Impact of Science upon Society (1952), My Philosophical Development (1959),
War Crimes in Vietnam (1967), and The Autobiography of Bertrand Russell
(3 volumes, 1967-1969).
"Russell, Bertrand Arthur William, 3rd Earl Russell," Microsoft(R) Encarta(R) 97 Encyclopedia. (c) 1993-1996 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.