Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

Russell, the Militant Philosopher

Russell’s Upbringing

Fear of Madness

The Geometry Lesson

A Pure and Perfect World

The Quest For Reason

Free at Last…

The Platonist View of Mathematics

The Reality of Numbers

The Formalist View

Three Kinds of Knowledge

Against Idealism

G.E. Moore and Propositions

The Foundations of Mathematics

What is Mathematics?

The Breakthrough

The Logic of Classes

The Eureka Moment

Mathematics as an Escape

Russell’s Devastating Paradox

A Sense of Disillusionment

Principia Mathematica

Types, Functions and Levels

How Certain is Certainty?

Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorem

Conclusions Thus Far

The Strange World of Logic

Analytic Questions of Logic

What is Logic?

Lady Ottoline Morell

Empiricism and British Empiricists

Descartes, Locke and Empirical Truth

Berkeley, the Idealist Sceptic

Hume on Impressions

Mill’s Phenomenalism

Russell’s Theory of Knowledge

A Logical Hypothesis

On Denoting

Language and Reality

Definite Descriptions

Paradoxes and Puzzles

Russell’s Solution

The Conclusion About Words and Referring

Grammatical Existence

Logical Atomism as a System

What Can be Referred to?

Russell and Berkeley

A Pure Logical Language

Analytic Philosophy

Wittgenstein: Benign or Malign Influence?

The Mystery of Names and Objects

But is it True?

Russell’s Theories of Meaning

The Ideational or Mentalist Theory

The Atomist Theory

Behavioural Theory

Frege’s Sense and Reference

Wittgenstein’s “Ghost” of Meaning

The Problems of Philosophy

Two Kinds of Knowledge

The Other Problems of Philosophy

Universals and Particulars

Are Universals Real?

What is Truth?

Seeing as God Might See

Wittgenstein, the Prodigal Son

The Ferocious Student

Parting of the Ways

Joseph Conrad

The First World War

The Conscription Issue

The Pacifist Russell

Prison

Theories of Mind

The Idealist Theory of Mind

The Materialist Answer

Double Aspect Theory

Russell’s Neutral Monism

Evaluation of Russell’s Theory

A Satisfactory War

A Bitter Turn

Dora and the Russian Revolution

Experience of Bolshevism

A Visit to China

Failure and Renewal

Russell and Science

The New Physics

Philosophy and Science After Russell

The Beacon Hill Experiment

Sexual Freedom, Almost

Russell’s Politics

The Anarchist View of Power

Socialism and the State

The Threat of Nationalism

World Government

Naïve About Politics

Not Completely a Goose

The Prophet’s Blind Spot

Scandal in America

Russell and Religion

No Proof or Disproof of God

The Enemy of Christianity

Russell in the Nuclear Age

The Peril of Nuclear Holocaust

The Nobel Prize

Pugwash and CND

Committee of 100

Schoenman and the Prophet

The Viper

The Closing Years

The End

Assessments of Russell’s Work

Philosophical Descendants

The Linguistic Analysis School

The Deeper Aim of Philosophy

The Failure of Empiricism

Russell, the Intellectual Icon

Further Reading

About the Author and Artist

Acknowledgements

Index