Expandable List
Edited by Richard A. Rempel, Andrew Brink and Margaret Moran
London and Boston: George Allen & Unwin
Pages: lv, 612
ISBN: 978-0-415-10462-3
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. “ASHES OF DEAD HOPES”
1. Journal [1902–05]
PART II. “REFUGE IN PURE CONTEMPLATION”
2. The Pilgrimage of Life [1902–03]
a. The Return to the Cave
b. Untitled
c. Untitled
d. The Worship of Truth
e. The Message of Nature
f. Untitled
g. Duty and Fate
h. Wisdom
i. The Past
j. Untitled
k. The Two Races of Man
l. Untitled
m. Untitled
n. The Communion of Saints
o. Untitled
p. The Ocean of Life
q. Austerity
r. Gentleness
s. The Forgiveness of Sins
t. The Atonement
u. Religion
3. The Education of the Emotions [c. 1902]
4. The Free Man’s Worship [1903]
5. On History [1904]
6. The Study of Mathematics [1907]
PART III. “OF THE TWO NATURES IN MAN”
7. Prisons [1911]
a. Untitled Outline
b. Contemplation
c. Action and Contemplation
d. Freedom and Bondage
e. Prisons I
f. The Good
8. The Essence of Religion [1912]
9. The Perplexities of John Forstice [1912]
10. Mysticism and Logic [1914]
PART IV. DEFENCE OF FREE TRADE
General Headnote
11. Literature of the Fiscal Controversy [1904]
12. The Tariff Controversy [1904]
13. Mr. Charles Booth on Fiscal Reform [1904]
14. Old and New Protectionism [1904]
15. International Competition [1904]
16. Mr. Charles Booth’s Proposals for Fiscal Reform [1904]
17. Mr. Gerald Balfour on Countervailing Duties [1904]
PART V. LIBERALISM AND WOMEN’S SUFFRAGE
General Headnote
18. On the Democratic Ideal [c. 1906]
19. The Status of Women [c. 1906]
20. The Wimbledon By-Election [1907]
21. After the Second Reading [1908]
22. Mr. Asquith’s Pronouncement [1908]
23. Liberalism and Women’s Suffrage [1908]
24. The Present Situation [1909]
25. Should Suffragists Welcome the People’s Suffrage Federation? [1909]
26. Address to the Bedford Liberal Association [1910]
27. Anti-Suffragist Anxieties [1910]
PART VI. OTHER EDWARDIAN CONTROVERSIES
28. Religion and Metaphysics, review of McTaggart [1906]
Headnote to Reviews of Robertson (29–30)
29. A History of Free Thought, review of Robertson [1906]
30. Freethought Ancient and Modern, review of Robertson [1906]
31. The Development of Morals, review of Hobhouse [1907]
32. Garibaldi’s Defence of the Roman Republic, review of Trevelyan [1907]
Headnote to Reviews of Chatterton-Hill (33–34)
33. The Politics of a Biologist, review of Chatterton-Hill [1907]
34. Biology and Politics, review of Chatterton-Hill [1908]
35. Memories and Studies, review of James [1911]
36. Dramatic and Utilitarian Ethics [1911]
37. The Professor’s Guide to Laughter, review of Bergson [1912]
38. The Place of Science in a Liberal Education [1913]
39. The Ordination Service [1913–14]
a. The Proposed Change in the Ordination Service [1913]
b. Mr. Russell’s Reply [1913]
c. Inspiration [1914]
40. Clio, A Muse, review of Trevelyan [1913]
APPENDICES
I Press Clippings of Russell’s Free Trade Speeches [1904]
II Comments on Sociological Papers [1904–05]
III Press Clippings on the Wimbledon By-Election [1907]
IV Meeting at Cambridge [1907]
V Deputation to Mr. Asquith [1908]
VI A Protest from the Voteless [1910]
VII Women’s Suffrage [1911]
VIII Persia [1911]
IX Protest Against the Prosecutions [1912]
X Letters from Professor Gwatkin [1913–14]
XI The Harvard Crimson Interview [1914]
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
Edited by Richard A. Rempel
with the assistance of Bernd Frohmann, Mark Lippincott, Margaret Moran
London and Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1988
Pages: xciii, 680
ISBN: 978-0-415-10463-0
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. 4 AUGUST–24 DECEMBER 1914
1. Friends of Progress Betrayed
2. The Rights of the War
3. Will This War End War? Not Unless the Democracy of Europe Awakens
4. War: The Cause and the Cure. Rulers Cannot Be Trusted with Peace Negotiations
5. Our Foreign Office. The Need of Democratic Control
6. Armaments and National Security
7. Belgian Professors in Cambridge
8. Fear As the Ultimate Cause of War
9. Why Nations Love War
10. War, the Offspring of Fear
11. Letter to C.A. Reed
12. Possible Guarantees of Peace
13. Peace and Goodwill Shall Yet Reign
PART II. 1915
14. The Ethics of War
15. Can England and Germany Be Reconciled after the War?
16. The Policy of the Allies
17. Mr. Russell’s Reply to His Critics
18. Is a Permanent Peace Possible?
19. The Reconciliation Question
20. A True History of Europe’s Last War
21. Mr. Bertrand Russell and the Ethics of War
22. To Avoid Future Wars
23. A Notable Gathering
24. Lord Northcliffe’s Triumph
25. How America Can Help to Bring Peace
26. The Future of Anglo-German Rivalry
27. The Philosophy of Pacifism
28. War and Non-Resistance
29. On Justice in War-Time. An Appeal to the Intellectuals of Europe
30. The International Review
31. The War and Non-Resistance. A Rejoinder to Professor Perry
32. Edith Cavell
Headnote to Two Papers on Cambridge Controversies (33–34)
33. Two Letters
34. Mr. Russell Replies
35. Review of Gilbert Parker, The World in the Crucible
Headnote to Two Critiques of British Foreign Policy (36–37)
36. The Unpublished Critique
a. Principles and Practice in Foreign Policy
b. Origins of War [Outline]
37. The Policy of the Entente, 1904–1914: A Reply to Professor Gilbert Murray
PART III. 1 JANUARY–7 DECEMBER 1916
38. Syllabuses for Eight Lectures on Principles of Social Reconstruction
a. Philosophy of Social Reconstruction [Sent to Lawrence]
b. Philosophy of Social Reconstruction [Sent to Ogden]
c. Principles of Social Reconstruction [Sent to Ogden]
d. A Course of Eight Lectures on Principles of Social Reconstruction
39. Principles of Social Reconstruction
40. Disintegration and the Principle of Growth
41. What Is Wanted
42. Conscription
Headnote to Two Papers on Pacifism (43–44)
43. Mr. Russell’s Reply
44. North Staffs’ Praise of War
45. The Danger to Civilization
46. Principles of Social Reconstruction and Notes for Harvard Lectures
Headnote to First Papers for the No-Conscription Fellowship (47–48)
47. Reply to “Academicus” on Conscientious Objectors
48. A Clash of Consciences
49. Two Years’ Hard Labour for Refusing to Disobey the Dictates of Conscience [The Everett Leaflet]
50. Practical War Economy
51. Will They Be Shot?
52. “Folly, Doctor-Like, Controlling Skill”
53. The Nature of the State in View of Its External Relations
54. Adsum Qui Feci
55. Liberty of Conscience
Headnote to Papers on Russell’s Trial for the Everett Leaflet (56–57)
56. Two Accounts of the Trial
a. Courtroom Defence of the Everett Leaflet
b. Rex v. Bertrand Russell
57. What Bertrand Russell Was Not Allowed to Say
Headnote to Three Tributes to the Conscientious Objectors (58–60)
58. An Appeal on Behalf of Conscientious Objectors
59. Mr. Tennant on the Conscientious Objectors
60. The Question of the Conscientious Objectors
Headnote to Two Calls for Peace Negotiations (61–62)
61. Why Not Peace Negotiations?
62. What Are We Fighting For?
63. The Cardiff Speech
64. British Politics
65. Hon. Bertrand Russell Says When Fate of Constantinople Is Settled
66. The Conscientious Objector
67. Rex v. Russell
68. Clifford Allen and Mr. Lloyd George
69. Meeting with General Cockerill
70. Bertrand Russell and the War Office
Headnote to Two Papers from the Northern Lecture Tour (71–72)
71. The World As It Can Be Made [Syllabus]
72. Foreword to Political Ideals
73. What We Stand For
74. Mr. Russell’s Lectures
75. Mr. Bertrand Russell’s Case
76. The NCF and the Political Outlook
APPENDICES
I Cambridge Support [1914]
II Popular Responsibility for War [1915]
III Cause of Wars [1915]
IV Letter from 36 Sympathizers [1916]
V Memorandum for Private Deputation to the Prime Minister at the House of Commons [1916]
VI NCF Ideals [1916]
VII Bertrand Russell’s Advice [1916]
VIII Says War Will Have Bad Effect upon Education [1916]
IX Agenda for Meeting of National Committee of the NCF [1916]
X Fear Makes War [1916]
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
Edited by Richard A. Rempel, Louis Greenspan, Beryl Haslam, Albert C. Lewis, Mark Lippincott
London and New York: Routledge, 1995.
Pages: lxxxii, 630.
ISBN: 978-0-415-09410-8
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. PEACE DIPLOMACY AND AMERICA
General Headnote
1. The Momentum of War [1916]
2. Letter to President Wilson [1916]
3. Why Do Men Persist in Living? [1917]
4. Two Ideals of Pacifism [1917]
5. The Logic of Armaments [1917]
6. For Conscience Sake [1917]
7. The Pacifist at Large [1917]
8. The Future of The Tribunal [1917]
9. President Wilson’s Statement [1917]
10. Why the War Continues [1917]
11. The Prospects of the N.C.F. in the New Year [1917]
12. Prefatory Note [1917]
PART II. THE SPECTRE OF DOMESTIC CONSCRIPTION AND THE ABSOLUTIST CHALLENGE
General Headnote
13. Universal National Service [1917]
a. Universal National Service [1917]
b. General Policy [1917]
c. Industrial Conscription [1917]
d. Letter to NCF Divisional and Branch Secretaries [1917]
14. The Government and Absolute Exemption [1917]
15. National Service [1917]
16. Liberty and National Service [1917]
17. The Position of the Absolutists [1917]
18. Letters to Home Office Camps [1917]
a. To N.C.F. Camp Secretaries [1917]
b. To Camp Secretaries [1917]
c. Letter to Camp Secretaries on Home Office Work Centres [1917]
19. War and Individual Liberty [1917]
20. Saul Among the Prophets (i) [1917]
21. Conscientious Objectors [1917]
PART III. RUSSIA LEAVES THE WAR
General Headnote
22. Russian Charter of Freedom [1917]
23. Russia Leads the Way [1917]
24. The Evils of Persecution [1917]
25. The Conscientious Objector: Reply to E.A. Wodehouse [1917]
26. The New Hope [1917]
27. America’s Entry into the War [1917]
PART IV. INDIVIDUAL WITNESS OR COLLECTIVE ACTION
General Headnote
28. The Importance of Mental Growth [1917]
29. Should the N.-C.F. Abstain from All Political Action? [1917]
30. Home Office Camps and Slacking [1917]
a. Memorandum to the National Committee [1917]
b. Draft Letter to Home Office Camps [1917]
31. Resistance and Service [1917]
32. To the Russian Revolutionaries [1917]
33. The Russian Revolution [1917]
34. Report of Visit to Princetown [1917]
35. How to Destroy Prussian Militarism [1917]
36. The Value of Endurance [1917]
37. Letter of Resignation [1917]
38. Russia and Peace [1917]
39. Absolutist Conscientious Objectors [1917]
PART V. A SUMMER OF HOPE
General Headnote
40. Tribute at Leeds [1917]
41. Lord Derby and Leeds [1917]
42. Conscientious Objectors: Lord Derby and the Absolutists [1917]
43. The Chances of Peace [1917]
44. The Price of Vengeance [1917]
45. The Military Authorities and the Absolutists [1917]
46. Introduction to Clifford Allen’s On Active Service [1917]
47. Pacifism and Economic Revolution [1917]
48. Leeds Aftermath [1917]
49. The Renewed Ill-Treatment of “C.O.’s” [1917]
50. A Pacifist Revolution? [1917]
51. Pacifism and Revolution [1917]
52. ‘I Appeal unto Caesar’ [1917]
53. The Fall of Bethmann-Hollweg [1917]
54. The International Situation [1917]
55. Chancellor and Premier [1917]
PART VI. POLITICAL IDEALS
General Headnote
56. Political Ideals [1916]
57. Capitalism and the Wages System [1917]
58. Pitfalls in Socialism [1917]
59. Individual Liberty and Public Control [1917]
60. National Independence and Internationalism [1917]
PART VII. THE COALITION’S COUNTER-OFFENSIVE AGAINST DISSENT
General Headnote
61. “Crucify Him! Crucify Him!” [1917]
62. The Russian Revolution and International Relations [1917]
63. C.O. Hunger Strikes [1917]
64. The International Situation: The Pope’s Peace Note [1917]
65. Imperialist Anxieties [1917]
66. The N.-C.F. Greets the Delegates of Inter-Allied Socialist Conference [1917]
67. Self-Discipline and Self-Government [1917]
68. Six Months for Spreading Truth [1917]
69. Secret Diplomacy [1917]
70. The Charge of Anarchy [1917]
71. The Kaiser’s Reply to the Pope [1917]
72. Is Nationalism Moribund? [1917]
73. Asia and the War [1917]
74. The Times on Revolution [1917]
75. Count Czernin’s Speech [1917]
76. A Valuable Suggestion by the Bishop of Exeter [1917]
77. The People and Peace [1917]
PART VIII. THE NEW DICTATORSHIP OF OPINION
General Headnote
78. Saul Among the Prophets (ii) [1917]
79. Will Conscription Continue After the War? [1917]
80. The International Outlook [1917]
81. A New Tribunal for Gaol Delivery [1917]
82. The New Dictatorship of Opinion [1917]
83. Who Is the British Bolo? [1917]
84. Boloism in Power [1917]
85. The Sanctity of Conscience [1917]
86. Lord Lansdowne’s Letter [1917]
87. Military Training in Schools [1917]
88. The Government’s “Concessions” [1917]
89. Freedom or Victory? [1917]
90. International Opinion During 1917 [1917]
91. The N.-C.F. Christmas Card [1917]
PART IX. RUSSELL CHARGED: DISSENT IN DISARRAY
General Headnote
92 The German Peace Offer [1918]
93 The Bolsheviks and Mr. Lloyd George [1918]
94 Letter to the Morning Post [1918]
95 Draft of Defence [1918]
96 Statements by Bertrand Russell [1918]
a. Statement by Bertrand Russell [1918]
b. Statement by Bertrand Russell [1918]
PART X. RUSSELL IN PRISON
General Headnote
97 Human Character and Social Institutions [1918]
98 Despair in Regard to the World [1918]
99 On a Review of Sassoon [1918]
100 The International Outlook (ii) [1918]
101 The Single Tax [1918]
102 For Any One Whom It May Interest [1918]
103 The State God [1918]
PART XI. EPILOGUE: THE LEGACIES OF THE CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTORS
General Headnote
104 Why Are the C.O.’s Not Released? [1919]
105 What the Conscientious Objector Has Achieved [1919]
106 What the C.O. Stands For [1920]
APPENDICES
I Joint Advisory Council: A United Policy [1916]
II The Position in the Home Office Camps [1917]
III Russia’s Charter of Freedom [1917]
IV Guild Socialism and Education [1917]
V Conscientious Objectors: The “Absolutists” and the “Ungenuines” [1917]
VI Resolution on Home Office Camps [1917]
VII Clifford Allen’s Defence [1917]
VIII Plans for the People’s Party [1917]
IX Draft Memorandum to Lloyd George [1917]
X Question for the House of Commons [1917]
XI Re-organisation of Information Bureau [1917]
XII What We Stand For: Second Manifesto of the No-Conscription Fellowship [1917]
XIII Russell’s Requests to Brixton Prison Authorities [1918]
XIV To All Members of the Fellowship [1919]
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
Edited by Richard A. Rempel and Beryl Haslam with the assistance of Albert C. Lewis and Andrew Bone
London and New York: Routledge, 2000.
Pages: ci, 684.
ISBN: 978-0-415-09411-5
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. POST-WAR REALITIES
1. Intellectual Guidance for the Masses [1919]
2. The Biology of War [1919]
3. Dreams and Facts [1919]
4. Democracy and Efficiency [1919]
5. Philosophers and Rebels [1919]
6. Democracy and Direct Action [1919]
7. Philosophy and Virtue [1919]
8. The Noble Army of Philosophers [1919]
9. “The Biology of War” [1919]
10. The Infancy of Socialism [1919]
11. New Powers and Old Frontiers [1919]
12. Taking Dr. Rabagliati to Task [1919]
13. The Triumph of Common Sense [1919]
14. Germany Before the War [1919]
15. An Englishman’s China [1919]
16. Liberty and Law [1919]
17. Why I Am a Guildsman [1919]
18. Holy Russia [1919]
19. The Seamy Side of Revolution [1919]
20. The Philosopher King [1919]
21. How Great Men Are Expected to Feel [1919]
22. “The Same Door—” [1919]
23. The Anatomy of Desire [1919]
24. Heroic Adventure in the Antarctic [1920]
25. Civilization and the Class Struggle [1920]
26. Feeble-Minded and Others [1920]
27. The God Demos [1920]
28. A Product of Environment [1920]
29. To Save an Innocent Man [1920]
30. Food and the Man [1920]
31. Religious Evolution [1920]
32. Socialism and Liberal Ideals [1920]
PART II. PILGRIMAGE TO RUSSIA: HOPES AND DISILLUSIONMENT
33. Journal of Trip to Russia [1920]
34. British Labour Delegation to Russia and the Illness of Mr. Clifford Allen [1920]
35. Impressions of Soviet Russia [1920]
36. Why Russia Endures Bolshevism [1920]
37. Industry in Undeveloped Countries [1920]
38. To the Editor of Shanghai Life [1920]
39. Bolshevism—Some Light on the Theory [1920]
40. The Uses of Education [1921]
41. The Prospects of Bolshevik Russia [1921]
42. Why I Support the Labour Party [1921]
43. The Practice and Theory of Bolshevism [1921]
44. Communist Ideals [1921]
45. The Relief of the Russian Famine [1921]
PART III. CHINA AT THE CROSSROADS
46. First Impressions of China [1920]
47. The Happiness of China [1921]
48. To the Editor of the New Republic [1921]
49. Magdeleine Marx’s Book on Woman [1921]
50. China’s Road to Freedom [1921]
51. Capitalism in South China [1921]
52. Mr. Bertrand Russell and the Japanese Press [1921]
53. Ireland and Japan [1921]
54. Japan, U.S.A., and Us [1921]
55. China and the Powers [1921]
56. The Future of China [1921]
57. A Plea for China [1921]
58. China and Chinese Influence [1921]
59. The Problems of China [1921]
60. Is Chinese Independence Possible? [1921]
61. Sketches of Modern China [1921]
62. How Washington Could Help China [1921]
63. Reconstruction in China [1922]
64. China’s Entanglements [1922]
65. “Tuchuns”, Not “Teachers” [1922]
66. As a European Radical Sees It [1922]
PART IV. THE DOMESTIC RADICAL
67. Hopes and Fears as Regards America [1922]
68. Communism and Society [1922]
69. Free Thought and Official Propaganda [1922]
70. The Prevention of War [1922]
71. Communism by Stages [1922]
72. The World and the War-Dragon [1922]
73. Chinese Problems [1922]
74. The Christian Warrior [1922]
75. Bring Us Peace [1922]
76. Motive in Industry: A Reply to Professor Einstein [1922]
77. Instinct and the Unconscious [1922]
78. Two Election Leaflets [1922]
a. To the Electors of Chelsea [1922]
b. Why Thinking People Vote Labour [1922]
79. What Is Morality? [1922]
APPENDICES
I Problem: To Produce in Two Nations a Mutual Will to War [1919]
II Déclaration d’Indépendance de l’Esprit [1919]
III Clarté [1920]
IV La Civilisation et la lutte des classes [1920]
V Letters from Russia [1920]
VI Cabinet Report [1920]
VII Letter from China [1920]
VIII The Essence and Effect of Religions [1921]
IX Science of Social Structure [1921]
X The Dream [1921]
XI Two Interviews on the Far East [1921]
XII National “Hands Off Russia” Committee [1921]
XIII Russell’s “Death” in China [1921]
XIV Silesia: A Protest [1921]
XV Appeal for Inkpin [1922]
XVI “No More War” International Demonstrations [1922]
XVII Coalition Split Was a Sham [1922]
XVIII An Appeal to the Electors of Rushcliffe [1922]
Lost Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Edited by Andrew G. Bone, Nicholas Griffin and Michael D. Stevenson
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. ARTICLES IN “LA NACIÓN”
1. A Review of the European Situation [1923]
2. Anglo-French Amenities [1923]
3. Psychological Dangers in Europe [1923]
4. Preparing for the Next War [1923]
5. Possibilities of Fascismo [1923]
6. Europe’s Race towards Disaster [1923]
7. On the British Note of August 13 [1923]
8. The Defeat of International Legality [1923]
9. Mr. Baldwin and the General Elections [1923]
10. Great Britain’s Economic Difficulties [1923]
11. What a Labour Government Can and Cannot Do [1924]
12. The British Labour Government [1924]
13. Bertrand Russell Explains the Consequences of the Dawes Report [1924]
14. Hopes of Peace [1924]
15. The International Problems Which MacDonald Must Resolve [1924]
16. The Restoration of Peace in Europe [1924]
17. On Democracy and Government [1924]
18. The Achievements of the First Labour Government [1924]
19. The New British Government [1925]
20. British Policy under the New Government [1925]
21. The British Empire and the League of Nations [1925]
PART II. THE PROBLEM OF THE WEST IN CHINA
22. Eastern and Western Ideals of Happiness [1924]
23. Bertrand Russell Hits Back [1923]
24. The Boxer Indemnity and Chinese Education [1923]
25. Missionary Influence in China [1923]
26. Chinese and Western Ideals of Life [1923]
27. Our Promises to China [1924]
28. Headnote to Two Papers
a. British Imperialism in China [1924]
b. Letter to the Daily Herald [1924]
29. Two Reviews of Stephen King-Hall, Western Civilization and the Far East, and a Reply [1924]
a What Really Is Happening in China [1924]
b Asia and the White Man [1924]
c Why He Distrusts “Gentlemen” [1924]
30. The Far Eastern Problem [1924]
31. Future Cultural Relations of East and West [1924]
32. A Dawes Plan for China? [1924]
33. Letter to Mr. Yuen Ren Chao [1925]
PART III. AMERICA
34. Controversy at Harvard University [1924]
a. Bertrand Russell Scores Intellectual Quarantine [1924]
b. An Open Letter to the President of Harvard University [1924]
35. An Attempt to Convert Kentucky [1924]
36. Americanization [1924]
37. Impressions of America [1924]
38. The American Intelligentsia [1924]
39. Democracy in Prisons [1924]
40. Is America Becoming Imperialistic? [1924]
PART IV. REASON AND SOCIETY
41. Herd Instinct and Acquisitiveness [1922]
42. Instinct, Habit, and Intelligence [1922]
43. Tolstoy’s Domestic Problems [1923]
44. Law, Censorship and the Birth Control Movement
a. The Case of Margaret Sanger [1923]
b. Birth Control Prosecutions [1923]
c. Birth Control and the Law [1923]
d. Socialism and Birth Control [1923]
e. Message to Middle Western States Birth Control Conference [1923]
f. Birth Control [1924]
45. Preface to American edition of A Free Man’s Worship [1923]
46. Life as an Art [1923]
47. Can Men Be Rational? [1923]
48. The Recrudescence of Puritanism [1923]
49. Bertrand Russell’s Address to the Students of Edinburgh [1923]
50. The Effect of Science on Social Institutions
a. The Effect of Science on Social Institutions [Outline] [1923]
b. The Effect of Science on Social Institutions [Lecture][1923]
51. Biology and Religion [1923]
52. Dogmatic and Scientific Ethics [1924]
53. The Case against Islam [1924]
54. On History
a. How to Read History [1924]
b. Study of the Past [1924]
55. A Motley Pantheon [1924]
56. Machines and the Emotions [1924]
57. Mechanism and Life [1924]
58. Three Ways to the World [1924]
59. Ethics and the Drama [1924]
60. The Medicine Man [1924]
61. The Teacher and the Administrator [1924]
62. Could We Settle Everything by Compromise? [1924]
63. How To Be Free and Happy [1924]
64. Freedom versus Authority in Education [1924]
65. Socialism and Education [1925]
a. Socialism and Education [Outline]
b. Socialism and Education [Fragment]
PART V. THE PRACTICE AND THEORY OF POLITICS
66. The Philosophy of Conservatism [1922]
67. Slavery or Self-Extermination [1923]
68. What a Labour Government Could Do with the Universities [1923]
69. A Pensions Grievance [1923]
70. To the Electors of Chelsea [1923]
71. Introduction to The Spiritual Basis of Democracy [1924]
72. What Is Socialism? [1924]
73. The Politics of Oil [1924]
74. The Need for Political Scepticism [1924]
75. An Impression [of Lenin] [1924]
76. Psychology and Politics [1924]
77. French Policy Since Versailles [1924]
78. The Government and Scientific Research [1924]
79. How to Save Civilization [1924]
80. British Policy in the Near East [1924]
81. How to Secure World-Peace [1924]
82. What Is Wrong with Western Civilization? [1924]
83. The European Chaos [1924]
84. Causes of Modern War [1924]
85. Is the British Labour Government Revolutionary? [1924]
86. Bolshevism and the West [1924]
87. Government by Propaganda [1924]
88. Under Which Flag? [1924]
89. Appreciation of E.D. Morel [1924]
90. English Politicians and Writers on the Conservative Government’s Rejection of the Ratification of the Anglo-Soviet Agreement [1924]
91. British Labour’s Lesson [1924]
APPENDICES
Translations, Notes and Drafts
I Spanish Texts of La Nación Articles [1923–25]
II Statement Suggested by Bertrand Russell [1923]
III Science and Civilization [1923]
IV Memorandum on Wei-Hai-Wei [1924]
V Education and Peace [1924]
VI Is Labour Government Revolutionary? [1924]
VII Notes for Speeches [1924]
Interviews
VIII World Peace through Birth Control [1922]
IX Blames U.S.A. for Distress [1924]
X Science Man’s Destroyer [1924]
XI American Interviews [1924]
XII Interview in Tokyo Nichi-Nichi
XIII Fate of Boxer Indemnity [1924]
XIV Baldwin Cabinet Hit for Diverting Boxer Indemnity [1925]
Multiple-Signatory Texts
XV Universal Disarmament [1923]
XVI Destitution in Germany [1923]
XVII The Death of E.D. Morel
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Edited by Michael D. Stevenson
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
1. Life in the Middle Ages [C25.03]
2. The Novels We Read [C25.06]
3. Two Forecasts [C25.07]
4. The New Economic Policy in Soviet Russia [C25.09]
5. The Chinese Amritsar [C25.11]
6. Count Keyserling Surveys the World [C25.13]
7. Deliver China from Her Bondage [C25.14]
8. Those Questions Again! [C25.15]
9. Fair Play for the Chinese [C25.16]
10. British Policy in China [C25.17]
11. China Asserts Herself [C25.19]
12. Now Is the Time! [C25.20]
13. The World Wags for Webb [C25.20a]
14. Defend Dismissed Reader [C25.22]
15. Trotsky On Our Sins [C26.04]
16. Freedom in Society [C26.06]
17. What Is Happening in China? [C26.07]
18. An Agricultural Religion? [C26.08]
19. A Hundred Years Hence [C26.09]
20. What Shall We Educate For? [C26.11]
21. The Foreign Wolf in the Chinese Sheepfold [C26.12]
22. A Vigorous Attempt to Free Education from the Taint of Class [C26.13]
23. Capitalism—Or What? [C26.14]
24. On the Use of a General Strike [C26.15]
25. Bertrand Russell Tells How General Strike Affected the British People [C26.17]
26. Bertrand Russell Tells Why England Is Friendly to Jews [C26.19]
27. Is Carlyle’s Fame Enduring? [C26.20]
28. Bertrand Russell Explains True Meaning of Education [C26.22]
29. When Science Rules Us [C26.25]
30. Bertrand Russell Thinks America Will Rule the World in the Future [C26.26]
31. The White Peril in China [C26.27]
32. The Harm That Good Men Do [C26.28]
33. [Birth Control] [C26.30]
34. What I Think of America [C26.31]
35. Are We Living in a Decadent Age? [C26.33]
36. The Institution of Marriage Is Here to Stay [C26.34]
37. The Future Development of Asia [C26.35]
38. Should We Let the Scientists Govern? [C27.02]
39. Rewards and Punishments in Education [C27.03]
40. Bertrand Russell on the Decalogue [C27.04]
41. The Case for Withdrawing Our Forces [C27.05]
42. Force in China [C27.06]
43. Where Is China Going? [C27.07]
44. Democracy of the Future [C27.08]
45. British Folly in China [C27.09]
46. Why Psychoanalysis Is Popular [C27.10]
47. To Modern Parents [C27.11]
48. From the Stone Age to 1927 [C27.12]
49. Is Literature a Dead Art? [C27.15]
50. The Danger of Creed Wars [C27.17]
51. “Democracy Is Not Played Out!” [C27.18]
52. Birth Control and Housing [C27.18a]
53. The Babies Nobody Wants [C27.19]
54. Marx Not Responsible for Russian Communism [C27.20]
55. The New Life That Is America’s [C27.21]
56. Are Men and Women Equal? [C27.22]
57. [The Future] [C27.23]
58. Bolshevism As a Philosophy of Life [C27.24]
59. The Training of Young Children [C27.26]
60. Russell Opposed to Bolshevism [C27.27]
61. British Aristocracy Will Last As Long As the Monarchy [C27.29]
62. What I Believe [A49]
63. The Ethics of Birth Control [B23]
64. Freedom in Society [B24]
65. Letters from Russian Prisons [B26]
66. The Underworld of State [B27]
67. Twenty Years of Social Pioneering [B30]
68. China in Revolt [B33]
69. Modern Writers At Work [B45]
APPENDICES
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Edited by William Bruneau and Stephen Heathorn
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. BEACON HILL SCHOOL
1. Prospectus for Beacon Hill School
a. Beacon Hill School [1927]
b. Beacon Hill School [1929]
2. A Bold Experiment in Child Education [1927]
3. The Bertrand Russell School [1930]
4. Headnote to Free Speech in Childhood
a. Free Speech in Childhood [1931]
b. “Free Speech in Childhood” (1) [1931]
c. “Free Speech in Childhood” (2) [1931]
d. “Free Speech in Childhood” (3) [1931]
PART II: EDUCATIONAL THEORY AND PRACTICE
5. Education and the Good Life [1927]
6. How Behaviourists Teach Behaviour [1928]
7. The Application of Science to Education [1928]
8. Watson Versus Freud in Education [1928]
9. Intelligence Tests [1928]
10. Do the Thing That’s Nearest … [1928]
11. Mr. Russell Replies [1929]
12. What I Am Teaching My Children About War [1930]
13. The Mental Health of the Child from the Standpoint of the Teacher [1930]
14. Compulsory Military Training [1930]
15. Russell on True Function of Modern Education [1930]
16. Introduction to The New Generation [1930]
PART III. CHARACTER TRAINING
17. Early Education and Child Welfare [1930]
18. Why Pre-School Children Ought to Go to School [1928]
19. Education Without Sex Taboos [1927]
20. Mr. Bertrand Russell Replies [1928]
21. On the Evils Due to Fear [1929]
22. Stoicism and Mental Health [1929]
23. Idealism for Children [1929]
24. Why Is Modern Youth Cynical? [1930]
25. If My Children Are Happy, Intelligent, and Decent [1931]
26. Modern Tendencies in Education [1931]
PART IV. ON PARENTING
27. Are Parents Bad for Children? [1930]
28. Do Men Want Children? [1930]
29. Children and the Truth [1931]
30. Miss Mannin on Children [1931]
PART V. ON MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE
31. British Thinker Champions Ben Lindsey’s Plan [1927]
32. My Own View of Marriage [1928]
33. Romance—And So to the Divorce Court! [1928]
34. Is Modern Marriage a Failure? [1930]
35. Debate! Is Modern Marriage a Failure? [1930]
36. What Is to Be Done About Divorce? [1930]
PART VI. SCIENCE, FAITH AND THE FUTURE OF CIVILIZATION
37. Are Old Men Fit to Rule the World? [1927]
38. Russell Tells Why Eugenics is Not Popular [1927]
39. Does the World Progress? [1927]
40. Our Free Press! [1928]
41. Is Life Worth Living? [1928]
42. The Ego, The Family and the Nation [1928]
43. Speech to the Rationalist Press Association [1928]
44. Bringing Socialism up to Date [1928]
45. Count Keyserling’s Appraisal of Europe and Himself [1928]
46. Tolstoy—A Modern Hebrew Prophet [1928]
47. On Catholic and Protestant Sceptics [1928]
48. Revolution by Intelligence [1928]
49. What Faith Means [1928]
50. What Will the World Be Like a Hundred Years Hence? [1928]
51. Western Civilization: Whither is it Going? [1928]
52. Whither Mankind [1928]
53. My Vision of the Future [1929]
54. What is Western Civilization? [1929]
55. Freudianism [1929]
56. Are Insects Intelligent? [1929]
57. Do We Need a New God? [1929]
58. Disenchantment [1929]
59. Science and Taboo [1929]
60. The Sedentary Age [1929]
61. The World Man Lives In [1929]
62. Anatole France [1929]
63. Politics and Theology [1930]
64. Religion and Happiness [1930]
65. The Unending Quest [1930]
66. Barriers to Culture [1931]
67. Nice People [1931]
68. The Golden Book of Tagore [1931]
69. Hunger and Love [1931]
PART VII. AMERICA AND MODERNITY
70. Is America Giving a Chance to Individuality? [1928]
71. The Optimism of America [1928]
72. The Americanization of Europe Is Inevitable [1928]
73. The Cinema as a Moral Influence [1929]
74. Wasted Idealism [1929]
75. Sacco and Vanzetti [1929]
76. Modern Homogeneity [1930]
77. Thirty Years From Now [1930]
78. Alexander Berkman [1930]
PART VIII. POLITICAL COMMENTARY
79. Bertrand Russell on India As a Permanent Source of Trouble [1927]
80. Russia, Asia, and The West [1927]
81. England in China [1927]
82. The Road to Universal Peace [1928]
83. Nationalism [1928]
84. World’s Greatest Need Is Permanent Peace [1928]
85. Russell on Westernization of Turkey [1929]
86. Russell Sees Menace in Lateran Treaties [1929]
87. Socialist Government in England [1929]
88. “Macdonald Government Makes Rapid Strides” [1929]
89. Will the British Empire Last? [1930]
90. Bertrand Russell Despairs of Europe’s Future [1930]
91. The Arrest of Griffin Barry: Two Letters
a. “Pour encourager les autres” [1930]
b. Passports [1930]
92. Symposium on War Responsibility[1930]
93. Survey of Clergymen’s Attitudes to the Next War [1931]
94. What I Believe (1) [1927]
95. Prison Experiences [1929]
96. Confessions [1929]
97. How I Was Educated [1930]
98. My Private Decalogue [1930]
99. On “Literary Parasites” [1930]
100. Earl and Countess Russell [1931]
101. What I Believe (2) [1931]
APPENDICES
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
1. On Jealousy [1931]
2. Sex and Happiness [1931]
3. On Tourists [1931]
4. The Menace of Old Age [1931]
5. Aims and Achievements of Beacon Hill School [1931]
6. In Praise of Artificiality [1931]
7. Who May Use Lipstick [1931]
8. The Lessons of Experience [1931]
9. Hope and Fear [1931]
10. Are Criminals Worse Than Other People [1931]
11. The Advantages of Cowardice [1931]
12. The Decay of Meditation [1931]
13. Marriage and Personality [1931]
14. [Slavery in Marriage] [1931]
15. On Being a Good Boy [1931]
16. Whose Admiration Do You Desire [1931]
17. Who Gets Our Savings? [1931]
18. Are Children a Worry? [1931]
19. On Politicians [1931]
20. Keeping Pace? [1931]
21. On Snobbery [1931]
22. Plea for Mr. Gandhi’s Release [1932]
23. Christmas at Sea [1932]
24. On National Greatness [1932]
25. Is the World Going Mad? [1932]
26. Are We Too Passive? [1932]
27. Friendly Words From Bertrand Russell [1932]
28. Why We Enjoy Mishaps [1932]
29. Does Education Do Harm? [1932]
30. Are Men of Science Scientific? [1932]
31. Why We Read [1932]
32. Illegal? [1932]
33. A Manipulator’s Paradise [1932]
34. On Optimism [1932]
35. Will Capitalism Crash? [1932]
36. As Others See Us [1932]
37. Taking Long Views [1932]
38. Too Many Lectures Spoil the Student [1932]
39. How to End War [1932]
40. Sex Education in Schools [1932]
41. On Mental Differences Between Boys and Girls [1932]
42. On the Fierceness of Vegetarians [1932]
43. Where Police are Licensed Criminals [1932]
44. Bertrand Russell Thinks of War—Food—Children and His Unwanted Earldom [1932]
45. Furniture and the Ego [1932]
46. Why are We Discontent? [1932]
47. [Peano’s Death] [1932]
48. How People Economize [1932]
49. On Locomotion [1932]
50. Of Cooperation [1932]
51. Our Woman Haters [1932]
52. Should Children Be Happy? [1932]
53. The Influence of Fathers [1932]
54. On Societies [1932]
55. On Being Edifying [1932]
56. Do Dogs Think? [1932]
57. On Sales Resistance [1932]
58. Snobbery [1932]
59. Dangers of Feminism [1932]
60. On Expected Emotions [1932]
61. On Modern Uncertainty [1932]
62. On Imitating Heroes [1932]
63. The Sophistication of the Young [1932]
64. On Vicarious Asceticism [1932]
65. On Labelling People [1932]
66. Shipping Off Cornwall [1932]
67. On Smiling [1932]
68. Do Governments Desire War? [1932]
69. Patriots and Patro-Idiots [1932]
70. On Corporal Punishment [1932]
71. If Animals Could Talk [1932]
72. On Insularity [1932]
73. On Astrologers [1932]
74. In Praise of Idleness [1932]
75. On Protecting Children from Reality
76. The Decay of Intellectual Standards [1932]
77. Pride in Illness [1932]
78. Comments on the Basis of the Sexology Group of the Promethean Society [1932]
79. On Charity [1932]
80. The Uses of Adversity [1932]
81. On Reverence [1932]
82. On Proverbs [1932]
83. British Anti-War Council [1932]
84. On Clothes [1932]
85. Should Socialists Smoke Good Cigars? [1932]
86. A Sense of Humour [1932]
87. Love and Money [1932]
88. Interest in Crime [1932]
89. Internationalizing the Air [1932]
90. How To Become a Man of Genius [1932]
91. The Future of the Family [1933]
92. On Old Friends [1933]
93. Success and Failure [1933]
94. The Untouchables in India [1933]
95. On Feeling Ashamed [1933]
96. On Economic Security [1933]
97. Meerut Sentences [1933]
98. The Untouchables in India [1933]
99. The Modern Midas [1933]
100. On Tact [1933]
101. Changing Fashions in Reserve [1933]
102. The Meerut Case [1933]
103. 0n Honour [1933]
104. The Consolations of History [1933]
105. The Governmental Mentality [1933]
106. The Influence of Technique on Politics [1933]
107. How People Take Failure [1933]
108. On Conceit [1933]
109. Reply to Our Questions [1933]
110. The Meerut Case [1933]
111. This Way to Chaos [1933]
112. On Bores [1933]
113. Psychology of Sex [1933]
114. Sport and Politics [1933]
115. The Freedom of the Press [1933]
116. Should the Public Schools Be Abolished? [1933]
117. On Reticence [1933]
118. The Good Old Days [1933]
119. Moral Indignation and the Nazis [1933]
120. On Becoming Civilized [1933]
121. On the Art of Persuading [1933]
122. Indian Prisoners [1933]
123. Modern Marriage [1933]
124. The Rights of Persons Accused of Crime [1933]
125. The Prospects of Democracy [1933]
126. The Admiration of Strength [1933]
127. Wisdom From the West [1933]
128. The Triumph of Stupidity [1933]
129. Greatest Decision I Ever Made
APPENDICES
I A Philosopher Speaks [1931]
II What’s Wrong with Christmas
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
1. Meerut Prisoners [1933]
2. The Harmfulness of Political Creeds [1933]
3. On Race Hatred [1933]
4. The Spirit of Adventure [1933]
5. Freedom and Organization [1933]
6. What Makes People Likeable [1933]
7. On Self-Righteousness [1933]
8. The Limitations of Self-Help [1933]
9. On Spending Money [1933]
10. The Origin of Victorian Virtue [1933]
11. Cause of the World’s Troubles [1933]
12. On Propriety [1933]
13. I Escape from Progress [1933]
14. Some Objections to Internationalism [1933]
15. Experts and Oligarchs [1933]
16. Fugitive and Cloistered Virtue [1933]
17. Revolution without Tears [1933]
18. On Being Ashamed of Virtue [1933]
19. Men Versus Insects [1933]
20. Architecture and Social Questions [1933]
21. The Paralysis of Statesmanship [1933]
22. On Orthodoxies [1933]
23. Is Parliamentary Government Moribund? [1933]
24. Means to Ends [1933]
25. The Half-Way Emancipation of Women [1933]
26. The Cult of the Individual [1933]
27. On Being Argumentative [1933]
28. The Prevention of War [1933]
29. On Mediaevalism [1933]
30. Bertrand Russell and Communism [1933]
31. Nash’s Commentary [1933]
32. In Praise of Dullness [1933]
33. Why are Alien Groups Hated? [1933]
34. The End of Pioneering [1933]
35. Combating Cruelty [1933]
36. The Ideals of Fascism [1933]
37. Can We Think Quickly Enough? [1933]
38. On Discipline [1933]
39. [Bertrand Russell Thanks the “Forward” for Promptly Denying False Accusation Concerning Anti-Semitism] [1933]
40. On Mending Old Shoes [1933]
41. Expecting the Millennium [1933]
42. The War Mentality [1933]
43. What is Wrong with Fathers [1933]
44. The Churches and War [1933]
45. The Place of Force in the Modern World [1933]
46. The End of Prohibition [1933]
47. Bertrand Russell Takes Exception [1933]
48. On Loving Our Neighbours [1933]
49. Safety in Numbers? [1933]
50. On Self-Control [1933]
51. The Balance of Power [1933]
52. On Euthanasia [1934]
53. On Equality [1934]
54. Economic Dependence in the Family [1934]
55. The Sphere of Liberty in the Modern World [1934]
56. On the Origins of Common Customs [1934]
57. Why I Am Not a Communist [1934]
58. Religious Persecution [1934]
59. On Transferring One’s Anger [1934]
60. On Adult Education [1934]
61. Is Progress Assured? [1934]
62. On Curious Beliefs [1934]
63. Winter in North Wales [1934]
64. Is Anybody Normal? [1934]
65. Egoism [1934]
66. The Rule of Steel [1934]
67. What to Do with the Budget Surplus [1934]
68. Back to Nature? [1934]
69. Education and Civilization [1934]
70. Dangerous Thoughts [1934]
71. Parental Affection [1934]
72. “Changes on the School Front” [1934]
73. Japan and China [1934]
74. The State and Trade Unionism [1934]
75. British in India Like Nazis, Bertrand Russell Charges
76 Benevolence and Love of Power [1934]
77. Irrational Opinions [1934]
78. Science and Happiness [1934]
79. Social Sciences in Schools [1934]
80. Race and Nationality [1934]
81. The Problem of Leisure [1934]
82. What to Believe [1934]
83. Instinct in Human Beings [1934]
84. The School and the World [1934]
85. Fashions in Virtues [1934]
86. On Comets [1934]
87. Fear and Amusement [1934]
88. “Was Europe a Success?” [1934]
89. On Being Important [1934]
90. Europe and Africa [1934]
91. Censorship by Progressives [1934]
92. Protecting the Ego [1934]
93. Climate and Saintliness [1934]
94. Why Travel? [1934]
95. Obscure Fame [1934]
96. Insanity and Insight [1934]
97. On Ceremony [1934]
98. India and the West [1934]
99. Love of Money [1934]
100. When Men Die for Religion [1934]
101. On Specializing [1934]
102. Good Manners and Hypocrisy [1934]
103. The Decay of the Hereditary Principle [1934]
104. On Being Insulting [1934]
105. Peace Will Come to Europe if Germany Tires of Hitler [1934]
106. About Bertrand Russell’s Book [1935]
107. Why are Jews Persecuted? [1935]
108. The Uses of Abyssinia [1935]
109. Vigorous and Feeble Epochs [1935]
110. The Future of Japan [1935]
111. England’s Duty to India [1935]
112. Munitions and War [1935]
113. The Tragedy of Peace [1935]
114. Bertrand Russell on the World Chaos [1935]
115. Saving Europe from Disaster [1935]
APPENDICES
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
Edited by Andrew G. Bone and Michael D. Stevenson
London and New York: Routledge, 2008
Pages: lxxxiv, 904
ISBN: 978-0-415-09417-7
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. UNCERTAIN PROSPECTS FOR PEACE
1. On Isolationism [1935]
2. Profits and War [1935]
3. Hitler’s Thirteen Points [1935]
4. Dangers in the Far East [1935]
5. Pitfalls in Security Pacts [1935]
6. The British Labour Party and Hitler [1935]
7. If You Were Foreign Minister What Would You Do about Abyssinia? [1935]
8. The Home Office, the Labour Party and Air Raid Precautions [1935]
a. Your Duty in the Next War
b. Air Raid Precautions
c. How to Keep the Peace
9. How Not to Fight Fascism [1935]
10. Bertrand Russell Applauds U.S. Neutrality Decision [1935]
11. Keep out of War! [1935]
12. The New Alliance [1935]
13. The Dangers of Bluff [1935]
14. How to Keep Peace [1935]
15. In Lands Where Slums and Wars Are Unknown [1935]
16. Some Psychological Difficulties of Pacifism in War-Time [1935]
17. Socialism and the Planned State (Fabian Society Lecture) [1935–36]
a. Lecture Outline [1935]
b. The Prospects of Great Britain: Plan or No Plan [1936]
c. The Prospects of a Permanent Peace [1936]
18. Peace and the World [1936]
PART II. DIARIST FOR “THE NEW STATESMAN AND NATION”
19. A Weekly Diary (1) [1935]
20. A Weekly Diary (2) [1935]
21. A Weekly Diary (3) [1935]
22. A Weekly Diary (4) [1935]
23. A Weekly Diary (5) [1935]
PART III. IDEOLOGY AND POLITICS
24. Fear of Freedom [1935]
25. Why Be Afraid of Socialism? [1935]
26. The Case for Socialism [1935]
27. Why Radicals Are Apt to Be Unpopular [1936]
28. An Obituary of Liberalism [1936]
29. Dictatorships That Pass in the Night [1936]
30. Your Liberty Is in Danger [1936]
31. Blurb for Rudolf Rocker, Nationalism and Culture [1937]
32. Two Prophets [1937]
33. Power, Ancient and Modern [1937]
34. Political Democracy [1937]
35. The Superior Virtue of the Oppressed [1937]
PART IV. ON REASON, CRUELTY AND CONSCIENCE
36. The Causes of Happiness [1935]
37. Preface to In Praise of Idleness [1935]
38. Western Civilization [1935]
39. Intolerance, Past and Present [1935]
40. Individual and Social Morality [1935]
41. Do We Survive Death? [1936]
42. Greetings on Our Jubilee [1936]
43. Is Reason “Cold”? [1936]
44. The Established Church and the Report of the Archbishops’ Commission [1936]
45. Our Brave Impatient World! [1936]
46. Is Human Life Considered More Sacred Than Formerly? [1936]
47. Man Who Stuck Pins in His Wife [1936]
48. Auto-Obituary [1936]
49. Is Brutality Increasing? [1936]
50. On Violence in Thought and Feeling [1937?]
51. On Being Modern-minded [1937]
52. Law and Conscience [1937]
53. Anti-Semitism and Nazi Germany [1937–38]
a. Answers to Questions [1937]
b. The Persecution of the Jews [1938]
54. Byron and the Modern World [1938]
55. What Is Happiness? [1938]
PART V. SCIENCE AND SOCIETY
56. Science Is Tottering [1935]
57. Storms and Tempests [1936]
58. Blurb for Lancelot Hogben, Mathematics for the Million [1936]
59. Reply to Mr. Gorer [1936]
60. Chemistry’s Power of Life and Death [1937]
61. The Fairly Modern Mind [1937]
62. War in the Heavens [1937]
63. Two Reviews of E.T. Bell, Men of Mathematics [1937]
a. Lives of the Great Mathematicians (I)
b. Lives of the Great Mathematicians (II)
64. “Whither Britain?” (Fabian Society Lecture) [1937
a. Lecture Outline
b. Science and Social Institutions
PART VI. EDUCATIONAL THEORY AND PRACTICE
65. Academic and Professional Freedom [1935]
66. Lucy Martin Donnelly [1936]
67. The Future of State Education [1936]
68. Education for Democracy [1937]
69. Examinations [1937]
70. Education and Industry [1937]
71. Bringing up Parents (and Teachers) [1938]
72. What We Should Teach Our Children [1938]
PART VII. PARENTING, MARRIAGE AND SEX
73. The Break-up of the Home [1935?]
74. On Divorce [1935]
75. A Debate with G.K. Chesterton [1935]
a. That Parents are Unfitted by Nature to Bring Up Their Own Children
b. Who Should Bring Up Our Children?
76. On Equal Pay for Equal Work [1935]
77. The Amberley Papers: Origins and Authorship [1935–37]
a. Lord and Lady Amberley [1935]
b. The Amberley Papers (I) [1937]
c. The Amberley Papers (II) [1937]
78. On Wife-Beating [1935]
79. Rational Sexual Ethics [1936]
80. Dangerous Passions [1936]
81. Life Begins at Two [1936]
82. Is the Family Still a Vital Part of Modern Life? [1937]
83. Review of Blum, Marriage [1937]
a. Marriage Reform in France
b. Blum on Marriage
84. My Son, at 15 Months, Knows 150 Words [1938]
PART VIII. PACIFISM VERSUS COLLECTIVE SECURITY
85. British Foreign Policy [1936]
86. Spain’s Civil War [1936]
87. A Turning-Point in Foreign Policy [1936]
88. Blurb for, and Review of, Freda Utley, Japan’s Feet of Clay [1936]
a. Freda Utley, Japan’s Feet of Clay
b. Far Eastern Imperialism
89. Critical Responses to Which Way to Peace? [1936–37]
a. Logic of the Pacifist Case [1936]
b. Which Way to Peace? (I) [1936]
c. Which Way to Peace? (II) [1937]
d. Pacifism or Collective Security? A Reply [1937]
90. The Paralysis of England [1936]
91. “No Continental Entanglements” [1936]
92. What 1937 Will Bring [1936]
93. Methodism and Armament Firms [1937]
94. Christianity and the Church [1937]
95. Collective “Security” [1937]
96. Russell’s Maiden Speech in the House of Lords [1937]
a. Prepared Speech
b. Foreign Affairs
97. Humanizing Warfare [1937]
98. A World of Fairy Tales [1937]
99. The Crisis in Foreign Policy [1938]
100. Has the League a Future? [1938]
APPENDIXES
Interviews
I Good Adults— Not Good Children [1935]
II What’s What in War; Steel, Says Russell [1935]
III War to Grip America, Says Savant Russell [1935]
IV An Interview with Bertrand Russell [1935]
V Peace and the Price to be Paid [1938]
Multiple-Signatory Texts
VI No Passport [1935]
VII Precautions for Air Raids [1935]
VIII The University Labour Federation [1935]
IX Mental Disorders [1935]
X British Institute of Philosophy [1935]
XI Foreword to What Was His Crime? The Case of Carl von Ossietzky [1936]
XII The L.C.C. and a Film [1937]
XIII Arts Peace Campaign [1938]
Miscellaneous Shorter Writings
XIV Notes for Three Articles [1937?]
XV Notes on War and Film [1938?]
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Edited by Michael D. Stevenson
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
1. The Decline of the British Empire [1938]
2. Pythagoras [1938?]
3. England’s Perplexities [1939]
4. I Believe [1939]
5. Freedom and Government [1940]
6. Report of Lecture to UCLA Class [1940]
7. America the Next World Centre [1940?]
8. Taming Economic Power [1938]
9. The Role of the Intellectual in the Modern World [1939]
10. Is Security Increasing? [1939]
11. Democracy and Economics [1939]
12. Munich Rather Than War [1939]
13. Individual Freedom in England and America [1939]
14. The Case for U.S. Neutrality [1939]
15. Education for Democracy [1939]
16. Bertrand Russell Reviews “Apostles of Revolution” [1939]
17. Can Power Be Humanized? [1939]
18. Too Optimistic [1940]
19. Russell’s Answer [1940]
20. Russell Re-Affirms Sex Liberality Stand [1940]
21. Russell to Tell of His Beliefs About Morality [1940]
22. Russell Strikes Back Branding Accusations as “Grossly Untrue” [1940]
23. No Statement as Yet, Says Note From Russell [1940]
24. Court Biased and Unjust Says Russell [1940]
25. Wider Significance of CCNY Case] [1940]
26. Educator to Remain in Silence [1940]
27. “Their Liberty, Not Mine” [1940]
28. Bertrand Russell Explains [1940]
29. Freedom and the Colleges [1940]
30. Cool Thinking Urged By Bertrand Russell [1940]
31. Freedom of Speech and the CCNY Case] [1940]
32. Do I Preach Adultery? [1940]
33. Russell Denies Despair [1940]
34. The Functions of a Teacher [1940]
35. [In Support of World War II] [1940]
36. Russell Explains Switch in His Outlook on War [1940]
37. Education in Democracy [1940]
38. The Tragedy of Reality [1940]
39. Dr. Russell Denies Pacifism [1941]
40. Long-Time Advocate of Peace Approves Present War [1941]
41. British Democracy [1941]
42. Has Democracy a Future? [1938]
43. “I have deliberately refrained from discussing anywhere …”
44. “Born in 1872, younger son of Viscount Amberley …”
45. “I am constantly asked for statements in my own defence …”
46. “The future of the controversy is at present uncertain …”
47. Statement on War for Barnes [1941]
48. Comment on Affidavit of Joseph Goldstein [1940]
APPENDICES
I James, Russell Debate Capitalist System Before Large Audience [1939]
II Mrs. Russell Speaks! [1940]
III “This—and Glamour, Too” [1939]
IV Lord Bertrand Russell Believes War Inevitable
V Patricia: “BR was born on May 18, 1872 …” [1940]
VI Patricia: Speech to Municipal League of L.A., 4 June 1940 [1940]
VII Patricia: List of great men (& women) who would support BR [1940]
VIII Patricia: Letter in CCNY Journal of Social Studies [1940]
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
1. Education in America [1941]
2. Blueprint for an Enduring Peace [1941]
3. Bertrand Russell Urges Creation of World Federation Controlling All Armaments [1941]
4. Messages for India Independence Day [1942]
5. To End the Deadlock in India [1942]
6. Proposals for an International University [1942]
7. Gandhi’s Stand Disapproved [1942]
8. Freedom in a Time of Stress [1942]
9. Nehru’s Credo [1942]
10. Bertrand Russell on India [1942]
11. Philosopher’s Hope [1942]
12. “What About India?” [1942]
13. Bertrand Russell Writes of India, Britain, and the U.S.A. [1942]
14. The International Significance of the Indian Problem [1943]
15. Keep Aggressor Nations Disarmed [1943]
16. [Barnes Foundation Firing] [1943]
17. We Can’t Afford Private Empires [1943]
18. Some Problems of the Post-War World [1943]
19. If You Fall in Love with a Married Man— [1943]
20. What Shall We Do with Germany? [1943]
21. An Outline of Intellectual Rubbish [1943]
22. Zionism and the Peace Settlement [1943]
23. My Grandmother and Mr. Gladstone [1943]
24. Eccentrics Preferred [1943]
25. The Russian Realities [1943]
26. Our World After the War—A Plan for International Action [1943]
27. The Future of Pacifism [1943]
28. Citizenship in a Great State [1943]
29. [Bibliographical Recollections] [1943]
30. Britain’s Shrunken Economy Makes Her Dependent on U.S. [1943]
31. Experience Among Freaks [1943]
32. My Program for India [1944]
33. Cooperate with Soviet Russia [1944]
34. Western Hegemony [1944]
35. Victors and Vanquished þ [1944]
36. Education in International Understanding [1944]
37. Debate: Are There Absolute Principles on Which Education Should Be Founded? [1941]
38. The Role of Intellectuals in a Democracy [1941]
39. Common Sense in Early Education [1941?]
40. Liberty in Time of National Emergency [1941]
41. A Comment for The Unfinished [1942]
42. The Rights of Man. Tom Paine [1942]
43. The American Mind [1942?]
44. The Problem of Minorities [1942]
45. Education and Democracy [1942]
46. Democracy and a Planned Economy [1942]
47. Problems of Democracy Outlines [1942]
48. Blurb for Burns, The First Europe [1942]
49. Notes for Debate with R. Niebuhr [1942?]
50. The Value of Free Thought [1942–43]
51. How to Enjoy History [1943]
52. Outline of a Political Philosophy [1943]
53. The Democratic Heritage of Poland [1944]
54. A Farewell to American Youth [1944]
55. Four-Power Alliance—Step to Peace [1944]
56. The Disarmament of Education [1944]
57. Democracy and the Economic System [1942–43]
58. Marriage and the Family [1942–43]
59. On Keeping a Wide Horizon [1941]
60. Blurb: Howard, America’s Role in Asia [1943]
61. Gandhi: Uncertain Star of the East [1944]
62. Philosophies in Practice leaflet [1943]
APPENDICES
I Russell versus Barnes [1943]
II The World Federation Plan [1942]
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Edited by Kenneth Blackwell
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND BIOGRAPHY
1 The Most Unforgettable Character I Ever Met [c.1944]
2 Eminent Men I Have Known [c.1944–49]
3 Ten of My Favourite Books [1945]
4 Statement on Using His Title [1945]
5 H. G. Wells—the Man as I Knew Him [1946]
PART II. VALUES AND EDUCATION
6 What Makes a Woman a Fascinator? [1944]
7 A Waste of Public Money [1944]
8 Democracy and Ability in Education [1945]
9 Make Divorce Easier [1945]
10 Proposal for a Free Rational Thought Club [1945]
11 The Value of Philosophy [1945]
12 Is the Child the Father of the Man? [1945]
13 Ideas That Have Harmed Mankind [1946]
14 Ideas That Have Helped Mankind [1946]
15 A Plea for Clear Thinking [1947]
16 Blurb for Puzzled People [1947]
17 Blurb for Curry, Education for Sanity [1947]
18 Blurb for Burns, The First Europe [1947]
PART III. SCIENCE AND DEMOCRACY
19 Should Scientists Be Public Servants? [1945]
20 What Is Democracy? (1) [1946]
21 What Is Democracy? (2) [1946?]
22 Should a Scientist Be Free to Tell? [1946]
23 Blurb for Popper, The Open Society and Its Enemies [1946]
24 Soviet Genetics [1946]
25 A Scientist’s Plea for Democracy [1947]
26 Science and Democracy [1947]
27 The Taming of Power [1947]
PART IV. BRITAIN, THE EMPIRE AND ANGLO-AMERICAN RELATIONS
28 Can Americans and Britons Be Friends? [1944]
29 How War Has Changed the British People [1944]
30 I Am Thankful for the B.B.C. [1944]
31 Britain—U.S.A. [1944]
32 Some Impressions of America [1944]
33 The Twilight of the British Empire [1944]
34 British and American Nationalism [1945]
35 Where Do We Go Now? [1945]
36 Future of India [1945]
37 Promise Freedom to India after War with Japan [1945]
38 The Future in India [1945?]
39 Message to India [1945]
40 Election Survey [1945]
41 Should We Abolish the House of Lords? [1947]
PART V. WAR’S END IN GERMANY AND THE FAR EAST
42 Can We Re-Educate Germany? [1945]
43 Obstacles to Democracy in Liberated Countries [1945]
44 The Future in China and Japan [1945]
45 A Philosophy for Reconstruction [1945]
46 What the European Victory Means to China [1945]
47 The Problem of Cruelty [1945]
48 Hopes and Fears for Tomorrow [1945]
49 Food Parcels Still Needed [1945]
50 Mass Deportations (1) [1945]
51 Mass Deportations (2) [1945]
52 Russian Deportations [1945]
53 The German Disaster [1945]
54 Situation in Central Europe [1945]
55 What Should Now Be Our Policy towards Germany? [1946]
56 German Recovery: a European Interest [1947]
57 United Europe (2) [1947]
PART VI. THE SOVIET UNION, WORLD GOVERNMENT AND THE ATOMIC BOMB
58 The Atomic Bomb [1945]
59 What Is the Truth about Russia? [1945]
60 What Should Be British Policy towards Russia? [1945]
61 How to Avoid the Atomic War [1945]
62 Letter on Appeasing Russia [1945]
63 Peace or Atomization? [1945]
64 What America Could Do with the Atomic Bomb [1945]
a What America Could Do with the Atomic Bomb
b Bertrand Russell Offers an Escape from Destruction
65 Britain and the Atomic Bomb [1945]
66 The International Situation [1945]
67 How I Would Win the Peace [1946]
68 The Atomic Bomb and the Prevention of War [1946]
69 Pax Sovietica vs. Pax Americana [1947]
70 The Outlook for Mankind [1947]
a The Outlook for Mankind [1947]
b United Europe (1) [1947]
71 Preface to the German Edition of Power [1947]
72 Atomic Energy Control [1947]
73 International Government [1947]
74 Survival in the Atomic Age [1947]
a Survival in the Atomic Age
b Still Time for Good Sense
75 The International Bearings of Atomic Warfare [1947]
76 The Future of Mankind [1947?]
APPENDICES
I Contributions to the BBC Brains Trust [1944–47]
II An Interview with Russell [1944]
III A World Worth Living in for All Peoples [1944]
IV Bertrand Russell Demands Release of Indian Leaders [1945]
V Starvation in Europe (1) [1945]
VI Starvation in Europe (2) [1945]
VII Bertrand Russell [1945]
VIII Filosofiens värde [1945]
IX Controversy over 53, “The German Disaster” [1945–46]
X Memorial to the Prime Minister [1946]
XI Famine and Disease in Hungary [1946]
XII Food Supplies [1946]
XIII Bertrand Russell on the Future of Mankind [1946]
XIV Food for Europe [1946]
XV Draft for a Petition [1946]
XVI Bread Rationing [1946]
XVII The Value of Conscience [1946]
XVIII Religious Freedom on the BBC [1946]
XIX United Europe Movement [1947]
XX Arrests in China [1947]
XXI Conditions of Peace [1947]
XXII “It’s Later Than We Think” [1947]
XXIII Revisions to The Scientific Outlook [1947]
XXIV An Interview with Bertrand Russell [1947]
XXV A Moscow Report of a Lecture [1947]
XXVI Deserters from the Forces [1947]
XXVII World Government [1947]
XXVIII Control of Atomic Energy [1947]
XXIX Pocket Diary and Earnings [1947]
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
Index of Paper Titles
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Edited by Kenneth Blackwell
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND BIOGRAPHY
1 A Turning-Point in My Life [1948]
2 What Life Has Taught Me [1948]
3 Conrad’s Place and Rank in English Letters [1949]
4 George Bernard Shaw [1949]
5 Bertrand Russell Writes for the Daily Graphic on the Life of His Mind [1949]
George Orwell and 1984
6 Nineteen Eighty-Four [1949]
7 Book of the Year [1949]
8 George Orwell [1950]
9 The Key to Culbertson [1950]
PART II. VALUES AND EDUCATION
10 Culture and the State [1948]
11 The Magus [1948]
12 Why Fanaticism Brings Defeat [1948]
13 Bertrand Russell’s “Reith Lectures” [1949]
14 Sixty Seconds for God [1949]
15 The General Conference of Unesco [1949]
16 What Will Future Ages Think of Our Own? [1950]
Punishment and Crime
17 The Problem of Punishment [1950]
18 Crime and the Community [1950]
PART III. SCIENCE AND SOCIETY
19 Science as a Product of Western Europe [1948]
20 Science and Civilization [1948]
21 Can a Scientific Society Be Stable? [1949]
22 The Next Fifty Years (1) [1950]
23 The Next Fifty Years (2) [1950]
24 The Good and Harm That Science Can Do [1950]
25 The Science to Save Us from Science [1950]
26 Light and Shade of Fifty Years [1950]
PART IV. PROBLEMS OF DEMOCRACY
27 Preface to Third Edition of Roads to Freedom [1948]
28 Democracy and Foreign Policy [1948]
29 Public Opinion Polls [1948]
30 How to Promote Initiative [1948]
31 Freedom—at the Price of Freedoms [1949]
32 L’Individu et l’Etat Moderne [1950]
33 Is Popular Democracy Adapted to the Problems of 1950? [1950]
34 Can We Afford to Keep Open Minds? [1950]
PART V. BRITAIN AND ANGLO-AMERICAN RELATIONS
Ideas and Beliefs of the Victorians
35 A Period of Dread and Doubt [1948]
36 Toleration [1948]
37 John Stuart Mill [1948]
38 The American Mentality [1949]
39 You and Tomorrow [1949]
40 The Political and Cultural Influence of U.S.A. [1949]
PART VI. EUROPEAN PROBLEMS
41 Review of Burns, The First Europe [1948]
42 Comments on the Report of the Cultural Committee of the Congress of Europe, The Hague, May 1948
43 A Philosopher Gone Astray [1948]
44 European Culture [1948]
45 Interview on Berlin Radio [1948]
46 The Future of Europe [1949]
47 Unity of Western Culture [1949]
48 Germany’s Generals—Justice or Vengeance? [1949]
49 From Bertrand Russell [1949]
50 Ten Years After [1949]
51 Ernst von Weizsaecker [1949]
PART VII. MARXISM AND THE SOVIET UNION
52 The Communist Manifesto and the Liberal Tradition [1948]
a The Communist Manifesto and the Liberal Tradition
b The Marxist Poison 53 Prefatory Note to Second Edition of The Practice and Theory of Bolshevism [1948]
On Utley, Lost Illusion
54 Blurb for Utley, Lost Illusion [1948]
55 Introduction to Utley, Lost Illusion [1948]
56 First Sign of Decay [1949]
57 Soviet Enslavement of the Intellect] [1949]
58 Stalin Declares War on Science [1949]
59 What I Would Say to Stalin [1949]
Controversy with J.D. Bernal
60 Professor Bernal [1949]
61 Professor Bernal [1949]
62 Professor Bernal [1949]
On The God That Failed
63 What Went Wrong [1950]
64 The Intellectual Error of Communism [1950]
Two Blurbs
65 Blurb for World Review [1950]
66 Blurb for Swarup, Russian Imperialism [1950]
67 The Fanatics [1950]
PART VIII. THE ATOMIC BOMB AND WORLD GOVERNMENT
68 Atomic Energy Control and Its International Bearings [1948]
69 The Outlook for Mankind [1948]
70 The International Situation [1948]
71 The Prevention of War [1948]
72 World Government [1948]
73 Replies to Questions in Last Chance [1948]
The Westminster School Speech
74 Atomic Energy and the Problems of Europe [1948/49]
75 Resisting Russia [1948]
76 Values in the Atomic Age [1949]
77 Is Regional Association the Most Practical Step toward World Government? [1949]
78 Towards a New Loyalty [1949]
79 The Bomb: Can Disaster be Averted? [1949]
80 Problems of the Atomic Bomb [1949]
81 The International Control of Atomic Energy [1949]
82 Danger of a Thermonuclear Arms Race [1949]
83 Is a World State Still Possible? [1950]
84 Is a Third World War Inevitable? [1950]
APPENDICES
I Contributions to the B.B.C. “Brains Trust” Programme [1948–50]
II The Fat Ration [1948]
III Divorce Law Reform [1948]
IV Bertrand Russell and the Atom Bomb [1948]
V Dangerous Radical Russell Wants to Arm against Soviet Union [1948]
VI Det internationella läget [1948]
VII Det marxistiska giftet [1948]
VIII Förebyggandet av krig [1948]
IX Western European Union—the Next Step [1948]
X Letter to Walter W. Marseille [1948]
XI Rejoinder to “A Philosopher Gone Astray” [1948]
XII The German Generals [1948]
XIII Response to Arnost Kolman [1948]
XIV Earl Russell Denies Atom War Reports [1948]
XV Marriage and Divorce [1949]
XVI A Memorial to Goethe [1949]
XVII Divorce Reform [1949]
XVIII Lord Russell’s Warning [1949]
XIX Professor Bernal [1949]
XX University Professors [1950]
XXI Conscience [1950]
XXII Preface to Unpopular Essays [1950]
XXIII 1950 Revisions to An Outline of Intellectual Rubbish
XXIV Pocket Diary and Earnings [1948–50]
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
Index of Paper Titles
General Index
Edited by Andrew G. Bone
London and New York: Routledge, 2020
Pages: cvi, 1010
ISBN: 978-0-04-920092-0 (hbk)
ISBN: 978-1-003-10473-5 (ebk)
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTS, LECTURES, ARTICLES AND MISCELLANEA
1 Guest of Honour [1950]
Headnote to Three ABC Broadcasts (2–4)
2 The World as I See It [1950]
3 My Philosophy of Life [1950]
4 What Hope for Man [1950]
5 Ferment in Asia [1950]
6 Obstacles to World Government [1950]
7 Blurb for C.K. Bliss, Semantography [1950]
8 We and U.S. Can Lead and Help Asian People [1950]
9 Science Can Help Australia Support More People [1950]
10 Communism, Capitalism, Socialism [1950]
a Bertrand Russell Tells Us What Communism Is
b Private Monopoly Is Bane of Capitalism
c Greater Democracy Is Socialism’s Purpose
11 Living in the Atomic Age [1950]
a I. Institutions
b II. Individuals
12 Refuting the Archbishop of Melbourne [1950]
a Reply to Dr. Mannix
b Telegram from Perth
13 Why Western Australians Should Be Happy [1950]
14 Land with a Future for Ambitious Youth [1950]
15 My Impressions of Australia [1950]
16 Happy Australia [1950]
17 Hopes for Australia in a Hundred Years [1951]
PART II. “A COMMON-SENSE PARADISE”
18 If We Are to Survive This Dark Time— [1950]
19 What Desires Are Politically Important? [1950]
20 Loquacious Man and His Mind [1950]
21 “To Replace Our Fears with Hope” [1950]
22 “What Can I Do?” [1951]
23 What Does the Single Individual Signify? [1951]
24 The Future of Science [1951]
25 “Living in an Atomic Age”: Abstract, Foreword and Related Blurb [1951]
a Provisional Abstract
b Living in an Atomic Age
c Blurb for New Hopes for a Changing World
26 Christianity and Science. Is there a Gulf ? [1951]
27 Prof. Gilbert Murray Honoured [1951]
28 Are Human Beings Necessary? [1951]
29 Competition and Co-operation in Politics and Economics [1951]
30 Denies Categorization as a “Humanist” [1951]
31 New Hopes for a Changing World [1951]
32 The Road to Happiness (I) [1951]
33 Lecture to Young Men and Young Women’s Hebrew Association [1951]
a Life without Fear: A View of Poetry
b Questions and Answers
34 Sex Education Is Desirable [1951]
35 My Faith in the Future [1951]
36 A Liberal Decalogue [1951]
37 Prefatory Note to Reprint of “The Elements of Ethics” [1952]
38 The Road to Happiness (II) [1952]
39 How Fanatics Are Made [1952]
40 Future of the B.B.C. [1952]
41 Leonardo’s Day—and Our Own [1952]
PART III. AUTOBIOGRAPHY, HUMOUR, FICTION
42 Celebrity [1950]
43 How to Grow Old [1951]
44 How I Write [1951]
45 The Use of Books [1951]
46 Things I Know and Things I Conjecture [1951]
a Things I Know
b Things I Conjecture
47 Bertrand Russell: Biographical Notes [1951]
48 The Corsican Ordeal of Miss X [1951]
PART IV. AVOIDING WAR
49 The Fanatics [1950]
50 Message to Japanese Students [1950]
51 On Nationalism [1950]
Two Letters on Preventive War [1950–51]
52 Resignation from the Cambridge University Labour Club [1950]
53 Lord Russell and the Atom Bomb [1951]
54 Dictatorship Breeds Corruption [1951]
55 My Plan for Peace [1951]
56 Why Defend the Free World? [1951]
57 Soviet Humour—Does It Exist? [1951]
58 Fifty Years’ Movement towards Equality [1951]
59 Communism and Christian Socialism [1951]
60 European Unity and the Atlantic Alliance [1951]
61 China in the Light of History [1951]
62 The Problem of Germany [1951]
63 Preface to A World Apart [1951]
64 The Narrow Line [1951]
65 Western Values [1952]
66 How Near Is War? [1952]
67 One World—Is it Feasible? [1952]
68 Message to Anti-Franco Protest Meeting [1952]
PART V. COLD WAR AMERICA AT HOME AND ABROAD
69 On Mass Hysteria [1951]
70 Every Crisis an Opportunity [1951]
71 Why American Is Losing Her Allies [1951]
72 Lord Russell Sees MacArthur Dismissal as “Act of Courage” [1951]
73 What’s Wrong with Anglo-American Relations [1951]
74 Are These Moral Codes Out of Date? [1951]
75 Commentary on “U.S.A. The Permanent Revolution” [1951]
76 Meet the Press [1951]
Three Papers on Political Conformity and Civil Liberties
77 Using Beelzebub to Cast Out Satan [1951]
78 Bertrand Russell and the U.S.A. [1952]
79 Bertrand Russell and the U.S. [1952]
80 Is America in the Grip of Hysteria? [1952]
APPENDIXES
Interviews and Reported Speech
I Australian Interviews [1950]
II “Little Wisdom in World Today” [1950]
III American Interviews (I) [1950]
IV Happy? Of Course, Says the Earl [1950]
V The Nobel Prize Winners: Have They a Message for Us? [1951]
VI Early Years Important to Lord Russell [1951]
VII Baron Finds Answers to World’s Problems from Britain’s Greatest Thinker [1951]
VIII American Interviews (II) [1951]
IX The Next World War [1952]
Multiple-Signatory and Other Non-Authorial Texts
X Four Letters as President of the Mountaineering Association [1951–52]
XI Morley College [1951]
XII Understanding With Germany [1951]
BROADCAST TRANSCRIPTS
XIII An Anglo-Australian Brains Trust [1951]
XIV Could We Do More to Secure Human Rights? [1951]
XV You and the World [1952]
XVI Question Time [1952]
XVII Asian Club [1952]
Original Non-English Texts
XVIII Hvad betyder det enkelte individ? [1951]
XIX L’Avenir de la Science [1951]
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
Index of Paper Titles
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Edited by Andrew G. Bone
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. RUSSELL AT EIGHTY
1 Advice to Those Who Want to Attain Eighty [1952]
2 Meanderings of an Octogenarian [1952]
3 Reflections on My Eightieth Birthday [1952]
4 NBC Television Interview [1952]
a Adaptation: An Autobiographical Epitome [1952]
b Eighty Years of Changing Beliefs and Unchanging Hopes [1952]
5 An Octogenarian’s Retrospect and Prospect [1952]
PART II. PORTRAITS FROM MEMORY AND OTHER BIOGRAPHICAL WRITINGS
6 J.M. Keynes and Lytton Strachey [1952]
7 D.H. Lawrence [1952]
8 Sydney and Beatrice Webb [1952]
9 Some Cambridge Dons of the ’Nineties [1953]
10 Some of My Contemporaries at Cambridge [1953]
11 George Bernard Shaw [1953]
12 H.G. Wells [1953]
13 Joseph Conrad [1953]
14 Portraits From Memory—III [1952]
15 Max Beerbohm [1952]
16 Lord John Russell
17 Mahatma Gandhi [1952]
18 Sir Arthur Eddington [1953]
PART III. FICTION AND OTHER CREATIVE WRITING
19 Fiction [1953]
20 “G” Is for Gobbledegook [1953]
21 The Good Citizen’s Alphabet [1953]
22 1953 in Retrospect [1953]
23 The Prelate and the Commissar [1953]
24 Mr. Bowdler’s Family Bliss [1953]
25 Preface to Professor Mmaa’s Lecture [1953]
PART IV. BBC RADIO DISCUSSIONS AND INTERVIEWS
26 Academic Freedom in America and Britain [1952]
27 Press Conference [1952]
28 Europe and Asia and the Modern World [1952]
29 Personal Call [1953]
30 The Experience of Age [1952]
31 The Turn of the Year—Predicaments of Philosophy, Science and Art [1952]
32 [Interview on Short Stories] [1953]
33 Is Tyranny Self-Destructive? [1953]
34 Is There a Pattern in History? [1953]
35 The Nature of Liberal Civilization [1953]
PART V. EDUCATION AND ENLIGHTENMENT
36 Why Americans are Unhappy [1952]
37 [Goodwill Message] [1952]
38 Progressive Education [1952]
39 Possibilities of Happiness [1952]
40 Blurb for Robert Lindner, Prescription for Rebellion
41 Educational Prospects [1953]
42 Generation X [1953]
43 Education for a Difficult World [1953]
44 Are the World’s Troubles Due to Decay of Faith? [1953]
45 The Kinsey Report on Women [1953]
46 The World I Should Like to Live In [1953]
PART VI. FREEDOM, DEMOCRACY AND DICTATORSHIP: A CRITICAL DEFENCE OF THE WEST
47 What Is Freedom? [1952]
48 Western Freedom [1953]
49 A Historian’s Political Philosophy [1953]
50 Preface to The Evidence of Dr. Marie C. Stopes to the Royal Commission on the Press [1953]
51 World without Persecution [1953]
52 Obeying Law in Testifying [1953]
53 Ideologies and Power Politics [1953]
54 Voice of Freedom [1953]
55 Can Totalitarian Régimes be Stable? [1953]
56 What Is Democracy? [1953]
PART VII. THE DEATH OF STALIN AND OTHER COLD WAR CONCERNS
57 Blurb for Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists [1952]
58 Three Essentials for a Stable World [1952]
59 Britain Can Lead Europe to Equality with America [1952]
60 The End of a Revolution [1952]
61 If There is War War Wins It [1952]
62 Broadcast to India [1953]
63 Stalin’s Legacy [1953]
64 A New Russian Policy? [1953]
65 American Visas for Europeans [1953]
66 The Greatest Present Service to Mankind [1953]
67 British Guiana [1953]
a British Guiana (I)
b British Guiana (II)
68 Bertrand Russell and “Preventive War” [1953]
69 Spot Letter from Earl Russell, OM [1953]
APPENDIXES
Interviews
I U.S. Politicos Trod Primrose Path, Says Earl [1952]
II The Wise Old Man Tells the World [1952]
III At Eighty—a Highly Respected Rebel [1952]
IV If I Were You Young Man [1952]
V Russell Sees Workless, Hateless World [1952]
VI Tribute to a Great Man [1952]
VII The Lyons Den [1952]
VIII [Writing Short Stories] [1952]
IX [New Hope for Our World] [1953]
X No Pills for Pep! [1953]
Multiple-Signatory Texts
XI Religious Broadcasting [1952]
XII Napalm Bombs [1952]
XIII Racial Discrimination [1952]
XIV Homosexuality Laws [1952]
XV After the Prague Executions [1953]
XVI Sentence on an African [1953]
XVII Plea to N.A.T.O. Leaders [1953]
Miscellaneous Texts
XVIII Excerpts from a Brains Trust
XIX [Writing Fiction] [1953]
XX Bertrand Russell’s Address [1953]
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
Edited by Andrew G. Bone
London and New York: Routledge, 2003.
Pages: lix, 718.
ISBN: 978-0-415-09424-5
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. IMPLICATIONS OF THE HYDROGEN BOMB
1 The Danger to Mankind [1954]
2 Atomic Energy and the Future of the World [1954]
3 Atomic Weapons [1954]
4 Scientific Warfare [1954]
a T.V.—Tuesday, 13 April
b The Hydrogen Bomb
5 Where Do We Go from Here? [1954]
6 The Hydrogen Bomb and World Government [1954]
7 My Plan for the Most Hopeful Road to Peace [1954]
8 Reflections on the Re-Awakening East [1954]
9 The Morality of “Hydrogen” Politics [1954]
10 The Road to World Government [1954]
11 Comment on Harrison Brown’s Challenge of Man’s Future [1954]
12 Two Papers on India [1954]
a What India Can Do For Mankind
b What India Can Do For the World
13 1948 Russell vs. 1954 Russell [1954]
14 What Neutrals Can Do to Save the World [1954]
15 Communism and War [1954]
16 Man’s Peril [1954]
PART II. AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL, BIOGRAPHICAL, HISTORICAL AND COMMENDATORY WRITINGS
17 Sir Stanley Unwin [1954]
18 Tribute to Einstein [1954]
19 Trotsky in the Ascendant [1954]
20 Bernard Shaw [1954]
21 How I Write [1954]
22 History as an Art [1954]
23 Men of Genius [1954]
24 On Reading His Own Obituary [1955]
25 Three Autobiographical Broadcasts [1955]
a Experiences of a Pacifist in the First World War
b From Logic to Politics
c Hopes: Realized and Disappointed
26 Soviet Russia in Historical Perspective [1955]
27 Two Literary Blurbs [1954–55]
a Joan Henry, Yield to the Night [1954]
b Otto Larsen, Nightmare of the Innocents [1955]
PART III. LIBERTY, MORALITY, RELIGION AND OTHER PROGNOSES AND PRESCRIPTIONS
28 Have Liberal Ideals a Future? [1954]
29 Suspicion [1954]
30 The Next Twenty-five Years in Britain [1954]
31 Homosexuality as a Crime [1954]
32 Secrets of Happiness [1954]
a You and Your Family
b You and Your Work
c You and Your Leisure
d You and the State
33 Can the Censor Promote Virtue? [1954]
34 Was the Human Race Happier a Few Centuries Ago Than Now? [1954]
35 Birth Control and World Problems [1954]
36 The World in 2000 A.D. [1954–55]
a Where Will Britain Stand in 2000 A.D.? [1955]
b Men and Women in 2000 A.D. [1954]
c Education in 2000 A.D. [1955]
d The State in 2000 A.D. [1955]
37 Can Religion Cure Our Troubles? [1955]
38 Message to the Indian Rationalist Association [1955]
39 Message to the Conference on Cultural Freedom in Asia [1955]
40 Religion and Morality [1955]
a Christianity and Morals
b Religion and the Training of the Young
PART IV. ROADS TO PEACE
41 New Year Message, 1955, to the Swiss People [1955]
42 A Statement for the New Year [1955]
43 Policy and the Hydrogen Bomb [1955]
44 War and the Hydrogen Bomb [1955]
45 Two Letters on the Chinese Offshore Islands Crisis [1955]
a Peril in the East
b Letter “Not Sent” to The Manchester Guardian
46 Could Britain Fight? [1955]
47 Letter to the Daily Worker [1955]
48 Strategy and the Hydrogen Bomb [1955]
49 India Can Save the World [1955]
50 Can Permanent Peace be Achieved and How? [1955]
51 Can Man Survive? [1955]
52 Children of Hiroshima [1955]
53 The Road to Peace (I) [1955]
54 On Banning the Hydrogen Bomb [1955]
55 The Choice Is Ours [1955]
56 Steps towards Peace [1955]
57 The Russell–Einstein Manifesto [1955]
a Notice of Press Conference on Russell–Einstein Manifesto
b Abbreviated Statement for the Press
c Letter to Heads of State
d The Russell–Einstein Manifesto
e Press Conference by the Earl Russell at Caxton Hall, Westminster on Saturday, 9th July, 1955
58 What Can Be Hoped from the Big-Four Conference [1955]
59 World Conference of Scientists [1955]
a Move by World Parliamentarians
b Speech for Conference of Scientists
c Statement on the Conference Resolution
60 The Road to Peace (II) [1955]
61 International Press Conference [1955]
a Why Governments Should Renounce War
b Atomic Energy
62 How to Consolidate Peace [1955]
APPENDIXES
INTERVIEWS
I The Bomb: Where Do We Go From Here? [1954]
II Russell the Rebel [1954]
III The Wisest Man in the World Knows the Secret of Happiness [1954]
IV Good Humour, Happiness, Whimsy of the “Voltaire of Our Time” [1954]
V Bertrand Russell Says Peace Now Depends on Wisdom [1954]
VI What Is Happening to the English Language? [1955]
VII A Task for the Neutrals? [1955]
VIII Tea with Russell [1955]
IX See It Now [1955]
MULTIPLE-SIGNATORY TEXTS
X International Studies [1954]
XI Declaration of Atlantic Unity [1954]
XII Freedom of the Pen [1954]
XIII The Mainau Declaration of Nobel Laureates [1955]
NOTES AND DRAFTS
XIV Morals in Legislation [1954]
XV An Overture to Nehru [1955]
XVI The 1955 General Election [1955]
XVII Notes for the Press Conference at Caxton Hall [1955]
XVIII Drafts of Resolution to World Conference of Scientists [1955]
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
Edited by Andrew G. Bone
London and New York: Routledge, 2005.
Pages: lxxxiii, 718.
ISBN: 978-0-415-35837-8 eBook: 978-0-203-00455-5
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I. THE PROSPECT AND ILLUSION OF DÉTENTE
1 Failure of the Foreign Ministers’ Conference at Geneva [1955]
2 The Dilemma of the West [1955]
3 Science and Human Life [1955]
4 Nuclear Weapons and World Peace [1956]
5 How to Avoid Nuclear Warfare [1956]
6 Prospects for the Next Half Century [1956]
7 Prospects of Disarmament [1956]
8 Statement for Polish Radio [1956]
9 Nuclear Weapons [1956]
10 British-Soviet Friendship [1955–57]
a Message for a Meeting at the Stoll Theatre [1955]
b British-Soviet Friendship [1956]
c Welcome to Bulganin and Khrushchev [1956]
d Britain and Russia: What Now? [1957]
PART II. AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL, BIOGRAPHICAL AND PHILOSOPHICAL WRITINGS
11 Faith without Illusion [1956]
12 Why I Am Not a Communist [1956]
13 My Recollections of George Trevelyan [1956]
14 Cranks [1956]
15 Do Human Beings Survive Death? [1957]
16 Books That Influenced Me in Youth [1957]
a The Importance of Shelley
b The Romance of Revolt
c Revolt in the Abstract
d Disgust and Its Antidote
e An Education in History
f The Pursuit of Truth
17 Some Changes in My Lifetime: Good and Bad [1957]
18 Gilbert Murray [1957]
19 Answers to Questions about Philosophy [1957]
a This Is My Philosophy
b Philosophy
20 Mr. Alan Wood [1957]
21 Reactions to Why I Am Not a Christian [1957]
a Christian Ethics (1)
b Christian Ethics (2)
c Why I Am Not a Christian (1)
d Why I Am Not a Christian (2)
e Earl Russell Replies
PART III. SUEZ AND HUNGARY
General Headnote
22 The Suez Canal [1956]
23 Britain’s Act of War [1956]
24 This Act of Criminal Folly [1956]
25 British Opinion on Hungary [1956]
26 Message to the Indian Rationalist Association [1956]
27 The Atlantic Alliance [1956]
28 Message to The Hindustan Times [1956]
29 Message to Meeting on “Writers and the Hungarian Revolution” [1957]
PART IV. JUSTICE IN COLD WAR TIME
30 Bertrand Russell Urges Parole for Jacob Mindel [1955]
31 Two Papers on Oppenheimer [1955]
a Michael Wharton, A Nation’s Security
b The Scientist in Society
32 Four Protests about the Sobell Case [1956]
a The Sobell Case
b The Case of Morton Sobell
c Morton Sobell
d Message to the Rosenberg–Sobell Committee Commemoration Meeting
33 Symptoms of George Orwell’s 1984 [1956]
34 Foreword to Freedom Is as Freedom Does [1956]
35 An Open Letter to Mr. Norman Thomas [1957]
36 Justice or Injustice? [1957]
37 Anti-American Feeling in Britain [1957]
PART V. NINE “LONDON FORUM” RADIO DISCUSSIONS
General Headnote
38 Has the Left Been Right or Wrong? [1956]
39 The Importance of Nationality [1956]
40 The Role of Great Men in History [1956]
41 Is an Élite Necessary? [1956]
42 Is the Notion of Progress an Illusion? [1957]
43 The Immortality of the Soul [1957]
44 How Can We Achieve World Peace? [1957]
45 The Limits of Tolerance [1957]
46 Science and Survival
PART VI. “NATIONS, EMPIRES AND THE WORLD”
47 China, No Place for Tyrants [1955]
48 Letter to the Representative of IHUD [1955]
49 The Story of Colonization [1956]
50 Pros and Cons of Nationalism [1956]
51 Nations, Empires and the World [1957]
52 World Government [1957]
53 India, Pakistan and the Commonwealth [1957]
54 The Reasoning of Europeans [1957]
PART VII. THE NEXT STEP
55 Britain’s Bomb [1957]
a Britain’s Bomb (1)
b Britain’s Bomb (2)
56 Should H-bomb Tests Be Continued? [1957]
57 Abstract and Script for a Radio Broadcast [1957]
a Next Step (Abstract)
b The Next Step in International Relations
58 Earl Russell and the H-bomb [1957]
59 Population Pressure [1957]
a Population Pressure and War
b Population Pressures and Family Planning
60 Three Protests against Nuclear Testing [1957]
a Message to Be Read at the Meeting on April 30, 1957, of the National Council for Abolition of Nuclear Weapons Tests
b Letter from Bertrand Russell
c Statement for Meeting at Stanford University
61 Message to the First Pugwash Conference [1957]
62 The Future of International Politics [1957]
63 Britain and the H-bomb [1957]
64 Scientific Power: To What End? [1957]
APPENDIXES
INTERVIEWS
I East–West Relations after the Geneva Conference [1955]
II Talking to Bertrand Russell [1956]
III An Interview with Bertrand Russell [1956]
IV Frayed Temper May Endanger World [1956]
V Lord Russell Says Russia Fears China Far More Than West [1957]
VI Meeting with Russell [1957]
VII Voice of the Sages [1957]
MULTIPLE-SIGNATORY TEXTS
VIII Geneva: A Message to the Foreign Ministers [1955]
IX Suez and World Government [1956]
X Visiting Moscow [1957]
XI Two Protests against the Hydrogen Bomb [1957]
XII Hungarian Writers on Trial [1957]
MISCELLANEOUS TEXTS
XIII Steps to World Government [1955]
XIV China, geen oord voor tyrannen [1955]
XV Eight Blurbs [1955–57]
XVI Excerpts from Five Brains Trusts [1956–57]
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
IN PROGRESS
Edited by Carl Spadoni
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I: DÉTENTE, DISARMAMENT (INTERNATIONAL)
1 The Open Letters to Eisenhower, Khrushchev and Dulles [1957–58]
a Open Letter to Eisenhower and Krushchev [1957]
b A Reply to Mr. Krushchev and Mr. Dulles [1958]
2 World Government or World Annihilation? [1957]
3 Christmas Wish [1957]
4 East–West Negotiations [1958]
5 The Two Visions [1958]
6 Russell Speaks [1958]
7 Bertrand Russell on Negotiations [1958]
[7′] A Postscript to Portraits from Memory [1958]
8 Nuclear Dilemma [1958]
9 Two Unpublished Articles for Maclean’s Magazine [1958]
a First Steps in Preventing Nuclear War [1958]
b How to Diminish the Risk of Nuclear War [1958]
10 “Central Question” [1958]
11 Mankind Versus the H-bomb [1958]
12 A Banned Congress [1958]
a Appeal to European Intellectuals [1958]
b Intended Address to Congress at Basle, 5 and 6 July, 1958 [1958]
c To the President of the Swiss Confederation [1958]
d Letter to Nebelspalter [1958]
13 Budapest Trials [1958]
14 A Plea for Mankind [1958]
15 Quemoy: The Price of Prestige [1958]
16 The Dangers of Nuclear Warfare [1958]
17 Balance of Nuclear Power [1959]
18 Mr. Nehru’s Foreign Policy [1959]
19 Heroism? [1959]
20 India and Communism [1959]
21 Comments on the Open Letter to me from Professor Tetsuzo Tanigawa [1959]
22 Khrushchev’s Disarmament Proposal [1959]
a Mr. Krushchev’s Proposal [1959]
b Disarm. Plan Support Grows [1959]
c Peaceful Coexistence [1959]
d Disarmament: Is it Practicable? [1959]
PART II: THE CAMPAIGN FOR NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT
23 Steps to Nuclear Disarmament [1958]
24 Prefaces to Two Pamphlets [1958]
a Preface to Stop the H-Bomb Race [1958]
b Preface to Labour and the H-Bomb [1958]
25 CND and the United Nations Association [1958]
a A Message from Bertrand Russell [1958]
b Nuclear Disarmament [1958]
26 Nuclear Disarmament [1958]
27 Abundantly Justified [1959]
28 The Rocket Site Protests [1959]
29 Steps towards Peace [1959]
30 [Nuclear Disarmament] [1959]
31 Speech to the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, Manchester [1959]
a A Message from Earl Russell [1959]
b Notes for Address [1959]
c Address at Manchester, May 1st, 1959 [1959]
32 Lord Simon and the Nuclear Disarmament Campaign [1959]
33 The Purpose of CND [1959]
34 Speech for Trafalgar Square—20 September, 1959 [1959]
PART III: NUCLEAR TESTING
35 Political and Moral Leaders Comment on Soviet Suspension [1958]
36 Scientists Appeal to Premier [1958]
37 Letter to Prime Minister Macmillan [1958]
38 Why Bomb Tests Should be Stopped [1958]
39 The Unborn Victims of Nuclear Tests [1958]
PART IV: SCIENCE, SCIENTISTS AND PEACE
40 Address of Acceptance of the Kalinga Prize [1958]
41 Science and Coexistence [1958]
42 Mr. Marseille on Pugwash [1958]
43 My Address to Congress in Canada [1958]
44 The World is Round [1958]
45 A Blurb for and a Review of Brighter Than a Thousand Suns [1958]
a Robert Jungk, Brighter Than a Thousand Suns [1958]
b The Personal History of the Atomic Scientists [1958]
46 Should Men Go to the Moon? [1958]
47 Formal Address at Vienna 20 September, 1958 [1958]
48 Snobbery [1959]
49 Draft of Address to Pugwash Conference [1959]
50 Script and Recorded Statement for Seagram Symposium [1959]
a Five Minute Broadcast for the Scientific Symposium of the Seagrams Committee [1959]
b “The Future of Man” [1959]
51 Science and Peace [1959]
PART V: WORLD GOVERNMENT
52 World Government [1958]
53 “Monopoly in War” [1958]
54 Letter to The Observer [1959]
55 Broadcast Given in German on the BBC German Service [1959]
56 Telegram to Newsweek [1959]
PART VI: COLD WAR CONTROVERSIES
57 A Dispute with Emmanuel Shinwell [1958]
a The Right Grade of Deterrence [1958]
b The Nuclear Dilemma [1958]
c The Choices Before Us [1958]
58 Preventive War [1958–59]
a Nuclear War vs. Communist Domination [1958]
b Inconsistency? [1958]
c Bertrand Russell Reflects [1959]
d Straightening the Record [1959]
59 A Debate with Sidney Hook [1958]
a World Communism and Nuclear War [1958]
b A Reply to Dr. Hook’s Rejoinder [1958]
60 A Dispute with C.P. Snow [1958]
a “Progress” [1958]
b Progress and the Bomb [1958]
61 Dr. Pauling’s Visit [1958]
a Dr. Pauling’s Visit [1958]
b Dr. Pauling’s Visit [1958]
PART VII: AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL WRITINGS
62 Lady Carlisle’s Ancestry [1958]
63 Voltaire’s Influence on Me [1958]
64 Gilbert Murray [1958]
65 Who’s Who [1959]
66 War and Peace in My Lifetime [1959]
67 Odds and Ends about the War to End War [1959]
68 Family, Friends and Others [1959]
PART VIII: PHILOSOPHICAL WRITINGS
69 Preface to the Collection of Freethought Broadcasts by M. Jean Cotereau [1957]
70 Headnote to Two Papers [1958]
a The World and the Observer (i) [1958]
b The World and the Observer (ii) [1958]
71 Law and Ethics [1958]
72 Messages to American Rationalists [1958]
a “Salute from Britain” [1958]
b “Salute from Britain” [1958]
c A Message to the Hon. Local Secretary from our President [1958]
73 Philosopher’s Corner [1958]
74 A Reply to Mr. Charles Davy [1959]
75 The Expanding Mental Universe [1959]
a Synopsis of a Suggested Article for the Saturday Evening Post [1959]
b The Expanding Mental Universe [1959]
76 Letter to The Saturday Review [1959]
77 Russell’s Religious Views [1959]
PART IX: FICTIONAL AND HUMOROUS WRITINGS
78 Two Nightmares [1959]
a The Theologian’s Nightmare [1959]
b The Fisherman’s Nightmare or Magna Est Veritas [1959]
79 Catastrophe: Its Derivation [1959]
80 Reading History as It Is Never Written [1959]
81 Three Children’s Stories [1959]
a The Post Office of Pinky-Ponk-Tong [1959]
b The Great God Zump [1959]
c Sir Theophilus Thwackum and Captain Niminy Piminy [1959]
82 The Right Will Prevail or The Road to Lhasa [1959]
83 Newly Discovered Maxims of La Rochefoucauld [1959]
84 Two Parables [1959]
a Planetary Effulgence [1959]
b The Misfortune of Being Out of Date [1959]
APPENDIXES
Interviews
I Interview with S.W. Green [1958]
II World’s Choice: Peace or Annihilation in Next 50 Years [1957]
III Premier Was WrongþLord Russell [1958]
IV Leaders of Britain Applaud Bulganin’s “Summit” Offer. They All Replied Yes [1958]
V Bertrand Russell Still Is the Crusader at 85 [1958]
VI Mike Wallace asks Bertrand Russell Is it Time for World Government? [1958]
VII Interview with Kenneth Harris [1958]
VIII “I’m Tired of Reds Using My Name” [1958]
IX In the Direction of Sanity [1958]
X A Visit with Bertrand Russell [1958]
XI Three Interviews with Kingsbury Smith [1958]
XII From This Great Mind þ This Provoking Thought [1958]
XIII Press Conference [1958]
XIV Small World [1958]
XV Bertrand Russell at Home [1958]
XVI Interview with Lord Bertrand Russell [1958]
XVII Interview in the Beaver [1959]
XVIII Interview on CBC (Elaine Grand)
XIX Education for Survival [1959]
XX Bertrand Russell Sees U.S., Soviet As Allies [1959]
XXI An Interview with the Rt. Hon. Earl Russell, O.M., F.R.S. [1959]
XXII “Asian Club” “The Wisdom of the West” [1959]
XXIII Bertrand Russell Conversations [1959]
Interviews by Correspondence
XXIV Answers to the Two Questions Posed by Mr. Corsini [1958]
XXV German Rearmament [1958]
XXVI Letter to Mr. Josef Kadlec [1958]
XXVII It is Not Yet Too Late! [1958]
XXVIII Answers to Three Questions re Sleep and Dreams [1958]
XXIX Answers to Questions by Evelyn De Wolfe [1958]
XXX Answers to Nine Questions [1958]
XXXI Letter to Soviet Russia Journal [1959]
Miscellaneous Shorter Writings
XXXII Seven Assorted Blurbs [1958–59]
XXXIII Messages to British Peace Groups [1958–59]
XXXIV Messages to International Peace Groups [1958–59]
XXXV Messages to Students [1958–59]
XXXVI Messages to the United States [1958–59]
XXXVII Messages to the Eastern Bloc [1958–59]
XXXVIII Messages to Japan [1958–59]
Notes and Drafts
XXXIX Religion and Science [1958]
XL Two Drafts for CND Meeting, 5 May 1958 [1958]
XLI Fragments of Two Stories [1959]
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index
Titles of publications during the period, extracted from Parts A, B, C and K of A Bibliography of Bertrand Russell, followed by titles of unpublished manuscripts and typescripts (for 1960, and excluding blurbs) in the Russell Archives, from all of which a selection may be made for the volume.
IN PROGRESS
Edited by Sean Morris
Abbreviations
Introduction
Acknowledgements
Chronology
PART I: 1960
1 CAN WAR BE ABOLISHED? (IN FACT AND FICTION)
2 FOREWORD TO NEW MOVES IN THE H-BOMB STRUGGLE
3 FOREWORD TO OUT OF THIS WORLD
4 MESSAGE OF GREETING TO THE MEETING IN MADISON SQUARE GARDEN ON MAY 19, 1960 (IN TOWARD A SANE NUCLEAR POLICY)
5 MESSAGE IN A TRIBUTE TO DR. AND MRS. LINUS PAULING
6 A FIFTY-SIX YEAR FRIENDSHIP (IN GILBERT MURRAY, AN UNFINISHED AUTOBIOGRAPHY)
7 THE GREAT INTRUSION: DEMOCRACY IN HIGHER EDUCATION [C60.01]
8 THOUGHTS ON THE NEW YEAR [C60.01a]
9 THE POSSIBLE FUTURE OF MANKIND [C60.02]
10 [NEW YEAR WISH] [C60.03]
11 [“WHOLEHEARTEDLY”] [C60.03a]
12 I GREET “CUT ARMS” RALLY—BERTRAND RUSSELL [C60.03b]
13 “DETERMINATION NEEDED FOR DISARMAMENT” [C60.03c]
14 THE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITIES OF SCIENTISTS [C60.04]
15 4 MINUTE MADNESS [C60.05]
16 THE ISSUE OF NUCLEAR TESTING [C60.06]
17 REPORT WITH AN X-CERTIFICATE [C60.07]
18 DISARMAMENT [C60.08]
19 PHILIP NOEL-BAKER [C60.09]
20 [“ONE HAS TO SHOW GOODWILL”] [C60.10a]
21 PEACE? AND FREEDOM? [C60.11]
22 [HISTORY OF THE WORLD IN EPITOME] [C60.12]
23 AFTER PARIS [C60.13]
24 SUMMIT AGREEMENT [C60.14]
25 [PRAISE OF NEHRU] [C60.16]
26 CASE FOR A NEUTRAL BRITAIN [C60.17]
27 A QUESTION OF SURVIVAL [C60.18]
28 TO THE YOUTH OF JAPAN [C60.19]
29 LABOUR’S DEFENCE POLICY [C60.21]
30 THE GREATER RISK FOR BRITAIN [C60.22]
31 LABOUR’S DEFENCE POLICY [C60.23]
32 GREAT BRITAIN AS A NEUTRAL [C60.24]
33 THE CASE FOR NEUTRALISM [C60.25]
34 OLD AND YOUNG CULTURES [C60.26]
35 DISARMAMENT POLICY [C60.27]
36 “GREATEST THREAT” [C60.28]
37 BRITAIN’S TWO PERILS [C60.29]
38 BRITAIN’S HOPE OF SURVIVAL [C60.30]
39 THE WRONG ADDRESS? [C60.31]
40 NEW UPHAUS APPEAL A REMINDER THAT PAULING, TOO, MAY GO TO JAIL [C60.32]
41 [“ONLY ONE WAY”] [C60.33]
42 [LETTER INVITING MEMBERSHIP IN COMMITTEE OF 100] [C60.34]
43 [FORMATION OF COMMITTEE OF 100] [C60.35]
44 OFFER TO RESIGN BY LORD RUSSELL [C60.36]
45 THE CASE FOR DISARMING [C60.37]
46 PROSPECTS OF MANKIND [C60.38]
47 RUSSELL AND COLLINS STILL “IN AMITY” [C60.39]
48 NEUTRALITY [C60.40]
49 RUSSELL QUITS HIS BAN-BOMB POST [C60.40a]
50 “I WORK ON,” SAYS LORD RUSSELL [C60.40b]
51 BERTRAND RUSSELL TELLS WHY BRITISH LABOR VOTED TO RENOUNCE THE BOMB [C60.41]
52 THE RUSSELL–SCOTT CALL FOR NON-VIOLENT RESISTANCE [C60.42]
53 HIGH TREASON? [C60.43]
54 RUSSELL WRITES FOR FORUM [C60.44]
55 “HOSTILITY NOT ONLY WICKED, BUT SILLY” [C60.45]
56 BRITISH NEUTRALISM [C60.46]
57 SHOCKED BY ITA BAN [C60.47]
58 BERTRAND RUSSELL REPLIES [C60.48]
59 MISTAKEN IDENTITY AT THULE [C60.49]
60 [ANECDOTE ABOUT ELIE HALÉVY]
61 MEMORANDUM: POLICY OF THE C.N.D.
62 [ON MARGARET MCMILLAN]
63 [ANSWERS TO QUESTIONNAIRE ON NAZISM FOR DIE KULTUR]
64 SMALL WORLD WITH EDWARD TELLER
65 NUCLEAR TESTS
66 CIVIL DEFENCE
67 MESSAGE TO NATIONAL MANIFESTATION, HOLLAND
68 SPEECH FOR C.N.D., ST PANCRAS TOWN HALL, MARCH 10, 1960
69 MESSAGE FOR BRITISH PEACE COMMITTEE DEMONSTRATION
70 [“HYSTERICAL EMOTIONALISM”]
71 A SUGGESTION FOR THE AVOIDANCE OF WAR
72 [“WARMEST WISHES” FOR RABBI FEINBERG’S MEETING]
73 [ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS ON SUEZ, PALESTINE AND ALGERIA]
74 [SUPPORT FOR PROFESSOR YASUI’S APPEAL]
75 [DREAM ABOUT ZULU WAR]
76 THE CASE FOR BRITISH NEUTRALISM
77 [THE PROSECUTION OF LADY CHATTERLEY’S LOVER]
78 STATEMENT FOR SANITY OR SUICIDE
79 SPEECH FOR FEDERAL UNION—CENTRAL HALL, JUNE 2, 1960
PART II: 1961
1 PREFACE TO THE BASIC WRITINGS OF BERTRAND RUSSELL
2 WIN WE MUST
3 ON CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE
4 BERTRAND RUSSELL CALLS FOR VAST MOVEMENT OF PROTEST
5 A LETTER FROM BERTRAND RUSSELL
6 PREFACE TO SCHOOLS FOR NON-VIOLENCE
7 MESSAGE IN TO ALL FRIENDS OF PEACE IN THE WORLD
8 MESSAGE IN WORLD TRIBUTE TO MARGARET SANGER
9 PREFACE TO BURNING CONSCIENCE
10 MESSAGE IN DECLARATION
11 STATEMENT IN DEMONSTRATION OUTSIDE THE RUSSIAN EMBASSY
12 POLARIS [C61.01]
13 APPROACHES TO DISARMAMENT [C61.02]
14 THE IMPORTANCE OF DISARMAMENT [C61.03]
15 “MASSIVE AID” FOR CHINA [C61.04]
16 BAD HABITS IN MOSCOW [C61.05]
17 BERTRAND RUSSELL REPLIES [C61.06]
18 CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE [C61.07]
19 A MAN’S WORLD [C61.08]
20 LORD RUSSELL ON POLARIS DEMONSTRATION [C61.08a]
21 CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE [C61.09]
22 [PROTEST DECLARATION] [C61.10]
23 [BRITISH NEUTRALITY] [C61.11]
24 THE DAY I SHOUTED “MURDERER” IN MOSCOW [C61.12]
25 BERTRAND RUSSELL ON “UNILATERALISM” [C61.13]
26 BOTSCHAFT VON BERTRAND RUSSELL, O.M., F.R.S. [C61.14]
27 THERMONUCLEAR WAR: BATTLE OF THE EXPERTS [C61.15]
28 “MARCHERS” [C61.16]
29 DIFFERENCES ON DISARMAMENT [C61.17]
30 [“SHOULD GREAT BRITAIN DISARM UNILATERALLY?”] [C61.17a]
31 HUMAN LIFE IS IN DANGER [C61.18]
32 MESSAGE TO NEW ZEALANDERS [C61.19]
33 LORD RUSSELL’S MESSAGE TO DEMONSTRATORS [C61.19a]
34 BERTRAND RUSSELL REPLIES [C61.20]
35 [SAN FRANCISCO TO MOSCOW MARCH] [C61.20a]
36 PROTEST TO PRESIDENT [C61.21]
37 ADDRESS TO MIDLAND REGIONAL YOUTH C.N.D. CONFERENCE, 15 APRIL 1961 [C61.22]
38 NUCLEAR WAR WARNING BY BERTRAND RUSSELL [C61.23]
39 BERLIN WARNING BY LD. RUSSELL [C61.24]
40 THE BERLIN CRISIS [C61.25]
41 TRAFALGAR SQUARE MEETING [C61.26]
42 [SOVIET RESUMPTION OF NUCLEAR TESTS] [C61.27]
43 THE BERLIN CRISIS [C61.28]
44 K AND K DON’T UNDERSTAND [C61.29]
45 “THIS IS NOT A MUSIC HALL, LORD RUSSELL” [C61.30]
46 LORD RUSSELL ON “WHY WE ARE IN PRISON” [C61.31]
47 WORLD RESISTANCE MOVEMENT PLANNED BY LORD RUSSELL [C61.33]
48 THE COMMITTEE OF 100 [C61.34]
49 A COMPROMISE ON BERLIN [C61.34a]
50 FORTY ARRESTS IN CROYDON SIT-DOWN [C61.34b]
51 PREFACE TO THE FIRST ISSUE [OF OUR GENERATION AGAINST NUCLEAR WAR] [C61.35]
52 LORD RUSSELL AND THE CND [C61.36]
53 HERE’S HOW TO PUT ON THE BRAKES [C61.37]
54 CULTURAL FREEDOM [C61.38]
55 RUSSELL–SCOTT PROTEST LETTER [C61.38a]
56 FALL-OUT [C61.39]
57 “REBELLION” CALL BY EARL RUSSELL [C61.39a]
58 THOUGHTS ON THE 50-MEGATON BOMB [C61.40]
59 CAN MAN SURVIVE? [C61.41]
60 FROM LORD RUSSELL [C61.42]
61 IS CANADA STILL PURITANICAL? RUSSELL ASKS [C61.42a]
62 LORD RUSSELL’S STATEMENT “JUSTICE IN DANGER” [C61.43]
63 WHAT ARE HUMANITY’S CHANCES OF SURVIVAL? [C61.43a]
64 SHABBY “SUCCESS”, SAYS LORD RUSSELL [C61.44]
65 LONG-TERM REMEDIES [C61.45]
66 RUSSELL BACKS POTTLE DODGE [C61.45a]
67 PRISON SENTENCES [C61.46]
68 [NEW YEAR’S MESSAGE] [C61.47]
69 SPEAKING PERSONALLY
PART III: 1962
1 BERTRAND RUSSELL’S MAY DAY APPEAL TO ALL WORKERS
2 A MESSAGE FROM BERTRAND RUSSELL TO THE DELEGATES OF THE CONSERVATIVE CONFERENCE
3 YOU ARE TO DIE
4 MESSAGE IN PARLIAMENT IN CONTEMPT
5 MESSAGE IN AIR MINISTRY
6 INTRODUCTION TO ACCIDENTAL WAR
7 INTRODUCTION TO AN AGE OF TRIAL
8 FOREWORD TO CHILDREN IN THE NUCLEAR AGE
9 NUCLEAR WAR (IN THE COMPLEAT AFTER-DINNER SPEAKER)
10 MESSAGE IN CONGRÈS MONDIAL POUR LE DÉSARMEMENT
11 THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE PUGWASH MOVEMENT (IN DISARMAMENT)
12 MESSAGE IN EVERYMAN III
13 MESSAGE IN LOUISE PETTIBONE SMITH
14 MESSAGE IN INTERNATIONAL PEACE MARCH
15 CONCILIATING EAST AND WEST (IN PREVENTING WORLD WAR III
16 MESSAGE IN THE RADHAKRISHNAN NUMBER
17 FOREWORD TO THE WARFARE STATE
18 STATEMENT IN THE RAPACKI CAMPAIGN
19 UNILATERALIST DILEMMA [C62.02]
20 [OFFICIAL SECRETS ACT PROSECUTIONS] [C62.02a]
21 RUSSELL SPONSORS YOUTH PARLEY [C62.03]
22 UNILATERALISTS’ DILEMMA [C62.04]
23 NEW H-TESTS BLOW TO HOPES FOR DISARMAMENT [C62.05]
24 SET SOBELL FREE, URGES EARL RUSSELL [C62.05a]
25 [“ATTACKING CUBA WILL LEAD TO A NUCLEAR WAR”] [C62.06]
26 I AM GUILTY TOO, LORD RUSSELL TELLS POLICE [C62.06a]
27 “OUR RIGHT”—RUSSELL [C62.07]
28 THE CASE FOR BRITISH NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT [C62.08]
29 NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT: WHAT I THINK [C62.09]
30 [THE NUCLEAR PERIL] [C62.10]
31 [AGREES TO SPONSOR MOSCOW CONGRESS OF WORLD COUNCIL OF PEACE] [C62.11]
32 [AGAINST NUCLEAR TESTS] [C62.11a]
33 COME IN THOUSANDS SAYS LORD RUSSELL [C62.11b]
34 [“PARLIAMENT IN CONTEMPT OF HUMAN CONSCIENCE”] [C62.11c]
35 GLOBAL BUTCHERY [C62.12]
36 MESSAGE FROM BERTRAND RUSSELL [C62.12a]
37 THE COMMITTEE OF 100 [C62.13]
38 [“MESSAGE TO THE NETHERLANDS”] [C62.13a]
39 TESTS: RUSSELL ASKS NEUTRALS TO SEND SHIPS [C62.14]
40 “STOP RACE TOWARDS DEATH” [C62.14a]
41 [SPEECH BY BERTRAND RUSSELL FOR MEETING AT CARDIFF, 1ST NOVEMBER, 1961] [C62.14b]
42 THE AIMS AND TACTICS OF THE COMMITEE OF 100 [C62.15]
43 [“TO THE GERMAN PEOPLE!”] [C62.15a]
44 “RUSSELL SHIP” FOR PACIFIC ON MAY 14 [C62.16]
45 RUSSELL’S PLEA FOR GREEK PRISONERS [C62.16a]
46 A NEW “PLATFORM” FOR CND [C62.16b]
47 RUSSELL DENOUNCES LABOUR LEADERS [C62.16c]
48 [SUPPORT FOR PEACE RALLY] [C62.16d]
49 FOR AND AGAINST BEING 90 [C62.17]
50 THIS GREAT ENGLISHMAN BERTRAND RUSSELL [C62.18]
51 NO WITHDRAWAL BY LD RUSSELL; REPLY TO LABOUR’S OBJECTION [C62.19]
52 BERTRAND RUSSELL AT 90 STILL FIGHTING ON … [C62.21]
53 LORD RUSSELL SCORNS LABOUR OLIVE BRANCH [C62.22]
54 [LETTER TO LABOUR PARTY] [C62.22a]
55 BERTRAND RUSSELL CONTESTA A TIERRA Y LIBERTAD [C62.23]
56 [MESSAGE TO THE GREEK FRIENDS OF PEACE] [C62.23a]
57 [“IT IS NECESSARY TO STRIVE FOR ACCORD”] [C62.24]
58 “CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY” [C62.25]
59 A MESSAGE FROM BERTRAND RUSSELL [C62.27]
60 [MESSAGE TO EIGHTH WORLD CONFERENCE AGAINST A AND H BOMBS] [C62.28]
61 HAS MAN A FUTURE? [C62.29]
62 [ANTI-NUCLEAR ARMS CONVENTION] [C62.30]
63 NUCLEAR DISARMAMENT: WHAT I THINK [C62.30a]
64 RUSSELL URGES NEUTRAL PLANNED H-BAN [C62.31]
65 “WORST YET” BOMB [C62.32]
66 A PROTEST SHIP [C62.34]
67 OPEN LETTER FROM BERTRAND RUSSELL [C62.35]
68 SIT-DOWN LIKELY TO BE ABANDONED [C62.35a]
69 RUSSELL PLEADS FOR PACIFIST [C62.36]
70 [“RUSSELL’S MESSAGE TO THE CYPRIOT PEOPLE”] [C62.36a]
71 [HUMANISM] [C62.37]
72 NEW McCARTHYISM SWEEPS THE U.S., RUSSELL CHARGES [C62.38]
73 WHAT ARE THE FEW TO DO? [C62.39]
74 [NEW YEAR’S GREETINGS] [C62.40]
75 TO ALL SCHOOL CHILDREN [C62.41]
76 BERTRAND RUSSELL’S MESSAGE TO AMERICA [C62.44]
77 RUSSELL PLEADS FOR END TO “AMERICAN MADNESS” [C62.44a]
78 EARL RUSSELL’S REPLY [C62.45]
79 MR. KHRUSCHEV “AVERTED WAR” [C62.45a]
80 CAN NUCLEAR WAR BE PREVENTED? [C62.45b]
81 STATEMENT FROM RUSSELL [C62.46]
82 BEHOLD THE BURGLARS, KENNEDY TELLS RUSSELL [C62.47]
83 SCRAP NATO—RUSSELL [C62.48]
84 TELEGRAMA BERTRANA RASSELA [C62.48a]
85 [EMERGENCY CIVIL LIBERTIES COMMITTEE] [C62.49]
86 [THE ARAB–ISRAELI CONFLICT] [C62.49a]
87 SANITY IN THE NUCLEAR AGE [C62.50]
88 [ADDRESS TO TENTH PUGWASH CONFERENCE] [C62.50a]
89 [PROTEST TO THE SPANISH AMBASSADOR] [C62.51]
90 RUSSELL BACKS APPEAL FOR PAROLE OF SOBELL [C62.51a]
91 VATICAN ON DRUG TRAGEDIES [C62.51b]
92 NEXT PEACE MOVE KENNEDY’S [C62.51c]
93 PORTUGUESE JAILS “LIKE BASTILLE” [C62.51d]
94 CHINA “ALWAYS ATTACKED”, CHOU EN-LAI TELLS RUSSELL [C62.52]
95 TO DETECT ATOM TESTING [C62.53]
96 LORD RUSSELL ON CUBA [C62.54]
97 [FANATICISM AND MASS MURDER] [C62.56]
98 MASS MURDER, SYSTEMATIC GENOCIDE [C62.57]
99 CHINA: RUSSELL SPEAKS [C62.58]
100 BERTRAND RUSSELL’S MEMORABLE MESSAGE ON GETTING THE ECLC TOM PAINE AWARD [C62.59]
101 [CHRISTMAS MESSAGE] [C62.59a]
102 WHOLE PEOPLE “ENSLAVED” [C62.60]
APPENDIXES
Missing and Unprinted Papers
Annotation
Textual Notes
Bibliographical Index
General Index