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Russell
Preface
RUSSELL lived long and did much.
He is one of the relatively small number of philosophers
whose names are popularly known, and who in their
life and work have come to seem emblematic of
the great tradition of thought they represent.
The reputation Russell enjoyed among his contemporaries
rested on the multiplicity of contributions he
made - often highly controversial ones - to social,
moral, political, and educational debates. But
his claim to an enduring fame rests on his outstanding
technical contributions to logic and philosophy.
In what follows I survey his life's work in both
spheres. The aim throughout is to give as clear
an account of them as brevity allows. Because
this is not the place for detailed evaluation
of philosophical arguments, still less of technicalities
in mathematical logic, I give most houseroom to
exposition, but I venture some discussion also,
the themes of which can be pursued by consulting
the literature cited in the Further Reading section,
which shows the way for anyone who, having paddled
in the surf here, might like to go for the swim.
However, readers not especially interested in
the more technical reaches of logic and philosophy
can forgo Chapters 2 and 3, and can concentrate
instead on the story of Russell's life and his
contributions to public debate, as told in Chapters
1 and 4.
I am grateful to Keith Thomas and
the Press's keen-eyed reader for comments, to
Ken Blackwell for prompt help and documents from
the Russell Archive, and to Alex Orenstein and
Ray Monk for related and relevant discussion.
My thanks go also to Leena Mukhey for her work
on the index.
This is dedicated to Sue - 'dulces
dominae Musa Licymniae cantus, me voluit dicere'
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