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The years covered by this volume of the "Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell" were among the most productive of Russell's entire career.
This volume signals reinvigoration of Russell the public campaigner and captures the essence of Russell's thinking about nuclear weapons and the Cold War in the mid 1950s.
During World War I, Russell was political commentator for "The Tribune", a publication of the No-Conscription Fellowship. This volume contains many short papers from the period reflecting his response to the growing crisis.
Features Bertrand Russell's shorter writings against British participation in the World War I from its outbreak until the formation of Lloyd George's coalition.
This volume covers the period from the beginning of Whitehead and Russell's work on Volume 2 of the "Principles of Mathematics" to the critical discovery of the theory of descriptions in 1905. The collection includes many previously unpublished manuscripts.
This volume shows Russell in transition from a neo-Kantian and neo-Hegelian philosopher to an analytic philosopher of the first rank. It contains three articles which have not previously been published in English.
This volume collects together all of Russell's philosophical papers inspired by his work with Whitehead on "Principia Mathematica.".
"The Bertrand Russell Archive has as before, yielded some interesting unpublished material ... this volume lavishly footnoted, elegantly produced and a pleasure to read, is a real treat for anyone interested in Russell or in that strange remote country, Edwardian England." -- London Times Higher Education Supplement
Grapples with the dilemma that confronted the opponents of militarism and war in the 1930s - namely, what was the politically and morally appropriate response to international aggression. This title also includes a number of manuscripts from the Bertrand Russell Archives at McMaster University.
The 1896-1898 philosophical papers of Bertrand Russell, few of which were published in his lifetime, concentrate primarily on physics, arithmetic and the concept of quantity.
This volume collects together Russell's philosophical writings during the period from 1947-68.
This volume contains Russell's reviews of and introductions to other philosophical works including his famous introduction to Wittgenstein's "Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus".
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