 |
|
| |
|
 |
 |
at Global Oneness Community.
Share your dreams and let others help you with the interpretation!
Dream Sharing Forum
|
 |
Bertrand Russell - Influence on philosophy |  | Bertrand Russell - Influence on philosophy: Encyclopedia II - Bertrand Russell - Influence on philosophy |  | It would be difficult to overstate Russell's influence on modern philosophy, especially in the English-speaking world. While others were also influential, notably, Frege, Moore, and Wittgenstein, more than any other person, Russell made analysis the dominant approach to philosophy. Moreover, he is the founder or, at the very least, the prime mover of its major branches and themes, including several versions of the philosophy of language, formal logical analysis, and the philosophy of science. The various analytic movements throughout th ...
See also:Bertrand Russell, Bertrand Russell - Biography, Bertrand Russell - Russell's philosophical work, Bertrand Russell - Analytic philosophy, Bertrand Russell - Epistemology, Bertrand Russell - Ethics, Bertrand Russell - Logical atomism, Bertrand Russell - Logic and mathematics, Bertrand Russell - Philosophy of language, Bertrand Russell - Philosophy of science, Bertrand Russell - Religion and theology, Bertrand Russell - Influence on philosophy, Bertrand Russell - Russell's activism, Bertrand Russell - Pacifism war and nuclear weapons, Bertrand Russell - Communism and socialism, Bertrand Russell - Women's suffrage, Bertrand Russell - Sexuality, Bertrand Russell - Eugenics and race, Bertrand Russell - Russell summing up his life, Bertrand Russell - Comments about Russell, Bertrand Russell - As a man, Bertrand Russell - As a philosopher, Bertrand Russell - As a writer and his place in history, Bertrand Russell - As a mathematician and logician, Bertrand Russell - As an activist, Bertrand Russell - As a recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature, Bertrand Russell - From a daughter, Bertrand Russell - Quotes, Bertrand Russell - Asides, Bertrand Russell - Succession |  | | Bertrand Russell, Bertrand Russell - Analytic philosophy, Bertrand Russell - As a man, Bertrand Russell - As a mathematician and logician, Bertrand Russell - As a philosopher, Bertrand Russell - As a recipient of the Nobel Prize for Literature, Bertrand Russell - As a writer and his place in history, Bertrand Russell - As an activist, Bertrand Russell - Asides, Bertrand Russell - Biography, Bertrand Russell - Comments about Russell, Bertrand Russell - Communism and socialism, Bertrand Russell - Epistemology, Bertrand Russell - Ethics, Bertrand Russell - Eugenics and race, Bertrand Russell - From a daughter, Bertrand Russell - Influence on philosophy, Bertrand Russell - Logic and mathematics, Bertrand Russell - Logical atomism, Bertrand Russell - Pacifism war and nuclear weapons, Bertrand Russell - Philosophy of language, Bertrand Russell - Philosophy of science, Bertrand Russell - Quotes, Bertrand Russell - Religion and theology, Bertrand Russell - Russell summing up his life, Bertrand Russell - Russell's activism, Bertrand Russell - Russell's philosophical work, Bertrand Russell - Sexuality, Bertrand Russell - Succession, Bertrand Russell - Women's suffrage |  | |
|  |  | Bertrand Russell: Encyclopedia II - Bertrand Russell - Influence on philosophy
Bertrand Russell - Influence on philosophy
It would be difficult to overstate Russell's influence on modern philosophy, especially in the English-speaking world. While others were also influential, notably, Frege, Moore, and Wittgenstein, more than any other person, Russell made analysis the dominant approach to philosophy. Moreover, he is the founder or, at the very least, the prime mover of its major branches and themes, including several versions of the philosophy of language, formal logical analysis, and the philosophy of science. The various analytic movements throughout the last century all owe something to Russell's earlier works.
Russell's influence on individual philosophers is singular, and perhaps most notably in the case of Ludwig Wittgenstein, who was his student between 1911 and 1914. It should also be observed that Wittgenstein exerted considerable influence on Russell, especially in leading him to conclude, much to his regret, that mathematical truths were trivial, tautological truths. Evidence of Russell's influence on Wittgenstein can be seen throughout the Tractatus, which Russell was responsible for having published. Russell also helped to secure Wittgenstein's doctorate and a faculty position at Cambridge, along with several fellowships along the way. However, as previously stated, he came to disagree with Wittgenstein's later linguistic and analytic approach to philosophy, while Wittgenstein came to think of Russell as "superficial and glib," particularly in his popular writings. Russell's influence is also evident in the work of A. J. Ayer, Rudolph Carnap, Kurt Gödel, Karl Popper, W. V. Quine, and a number of other philosophers and logicians.
Some see Russell's influence as mostly negative, primarily those who have been critical of Russell's emphasis on science and logic, the consequent diminishment of metaphysics, and of his insistence that ethics lies outside of philosophy. Russell's admirers and detractors are often more acquainted with his pronouncements on social and political matters, or what some (e.g., Ray Monk) have called his "journalism," than they are with his technical, philosophical work. Among non-philosophers, there is a marked tendency to conflate these matters, and to judge Russell the philosopher on what he himself would certainly consider to be his non-philosophical opinions. Russell often cautioned people to make this distinction.
Russell left a large assortment of writing. Since adolescence, Russell wrote about 3,000 words a day, in long hand, with relatively few corrections; his first draft nearly always was his last draft, even on the most complex, technical matters. His previously unpublished work is an immense treasure trove, and scholars are continuing to gain new insights into Russell's thought.
Other related archives16 Questions on the Assassination, 18 May, 1840s, 1860s, 1872, 1872 births, 1875, 1876, 1878, 1890, 1894, 1897, 1900, 1902, 1903, 1905, 1907, 1908, 1910, 1911, 1914, 1916, 1918, 1920, 1921, 1922, 1925, 1927, 1930, 1931, 1935, 1936, 1939, 1944, 1945, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1952, 1955, 1957, 1958, 1960s, 1961, 1963, 1964, 1968, 1970, 1970 deaths, 1975, 2 February, 20th century, 20th century philosophers, 6th Duke of Bedford, A History of Western Philosophy, A. J. Ayer, Activism, Adolf Hitler, Agnostics, Albert Einstein, Alexius Meinong, Alfred North Whitehead, Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge, Alys Pearsall Smith, American war in Vietnam, Analytic philosophers, Anti-Vietnam War, Atheist philosophers, Atheist thinkers and activists, Augustus De Morgan, BBC, Barnes Foundation, Baruch Plan, Baruch Spinoza, Beacon Hill School, Biblical, Britain, British empire, British logicians, Bryn Mawr College, Cambridge, Cambridge Apostles, Cambridge University, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, Charles S. Peirce, Christian theology, City College of New York, Committee of 100, Conrad Sebastian Robert Russell, Constance Malleson, Darwinism, David Hume, Davros, Doctor Who, Dora Black, Douglas Spalding, Earls in the Peerage of the United Kingdom, Edith Finch, Einstein, English, English mathematicians, English non-fiction writers, English philosophers, Ernst Mach, Ernst Schröder, Euclid, Exodus, F. H. Bradley, FRS, Fabian Society, Fellows of the Royal Society, First World War, France, Frank, Frank P. Ramsey, Frege, G. E. Moore, G.E. Moore, Genesis of the Daleks, Georg Cantor, Georg Hegel, George Boole, German, Gilbert Ryle, Giuseppe Peano, Gottlob Frege, Gödel's incompleteness theorem, Hitler, Humanists, Hume, Hyde Park, Idealism, Immanuel Kant, International Congress of Philosophy, Irish Home Rule, J. L. Austin, Jean-Paul Sartre, Jerusalem Prize, John Conrad Russell, John Dewey, John F. Kennedy, John Russell, the 1st Earl Russell, John Stuart Mill, Kantian, Karl Popper, Katharine Jane Russell, Kurt Gödel, Lecturers of the London School of Economics, Lenin, Liberal Democrat, Liberal Party, Literature, Logical atomism, London School of Economics, Ludwig Wittgenstein, March 6, Marxism, McMaster University, Merioneth, Michael Wisher, Ministry of Defence, Monmouthshire, National Secular Society, Natives of Monmouthshire, Naturalistic fallacy, New Left, Nobel Laureate, Nobel Prize in Literature, Nobel Prize in Literature winners, November 20, OM, Occam's Razor, Order of Merit, Ottoline Morrell, Oxford, P. F. Strawson, Paris, Parliament, Peking, Pembroke Lodge, Penrhyndeudraeth, Philadelphia, Philip Henry Gosse, Philosophers of language, Platonism, Polymaths, Premature obituaries, Presbyterian, Prime Minister, Principia Mathematica, Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs, Quaker, Ralph Schoenman, Ray Monk, Richmond Park, Rosalind Howard, Royal Society, Rudolph Carnap, Russell Tribunal, Russell's paradox, Russell-Einstein Manifesto, Russia, Russian Revolution, Santa Barbara, Scottish, Sidney Hook, Social Democracy, South London, Soviet Union, Stalin, The Bertrand Russell Case, The Right Honourable, Theory of types, Tractatus, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, Trellech, Trinity College, United States, University of California, Los Angeles, Utilitarian, Victorian, Vienna, Vietnam War, Viscount Amberley, W. V. Quine, Wales, Walter W. Marseille, Westminster School, Whig, Whitehead, Why I Am Not a Christian, Willard Quine, William James, William of Ockham, Wittgenstein, World War I, World War II, World federalists, abstract, academic, activism, activist, actress, adolescence, agnostic, analytic philosophy, anti-war, appeasement, argument from design, arguments for the existence of God, aristocratic, arithmetic, atheist, atomic, attitudes, authority, autobiography, axiomatic set theory, axiomatic system, axioms, biologist, birth control, bronchitis, by-election, cardinal number, civil, civil disobedience, classes, colours, communism, communist revolution, computer science, concept, courage, court, courts, creative, critic, definite descriptions, democratic socialism, depression, diphtheria, doctorate, economic, education, emotivism, empirical research, epistemology, equivalent, eternal, eugenics, evil, existence, fact, false, famous, fear, first cause argument, freedom of thought, geometry, god, godfather, governess, hero, hotel, humanitarian, ideal, idealist, ideologies, incorrect reports, influenza, information technology, intellectuals, intuition, isomorphic, jail, journalism, journalist, king, knowledge by acquaintance, knowledge by description, language, lectures, liberal, logical positivists, logician, logicism, magazine, marriage, material, mathematical logic, mathematician, mathematics, meaningless, mental, mental illness, metaphysics, modern, moral, mysticism, naive set theory, natural-law argument, nee, neo-Hegelianism, neutral monism, newspaper, nuclear disarmament, number, omphalos hypothesis, pacifist, pamphlet, paradoxes, patron saint, perceptions, philosopher, philosophy, philosophy of language, philosophy of science, physical, physics, pneumonia, political, predictions, preferences, process philosophy, proposition, propositions, radical, rational, realist, reality, relations, religion, religious, schizophrenia, science, scientific method, scientist, sense data, sentence, sexual, social justice, socialist, solution, sounds, space, space-time, subjective, suicide, supernatural, superstition, theory, theory of descriptions, time, title, totalitarianism, tribunal, truth, truth-functional, values, war, will, world, world government, world wars, writer, zealot
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Influence on philosophy", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
|
|
More material related to Bertrand Russell can be found here:
|
|
« Back
|
Search the Global Oneness web site |
|
|
|
|
 |
Sneak-Peek of Global Oneness Community
Hi friend! The Global Oneness Community, the place for information and sharing about Oneness is not really launched yet (you will see there is still some clean up to do) ...but it is now open for a sneak-peek! And if you wish - please register and become one of the very first members to do so! Jonas
Forum Home,
Articles,
Photo Gallery,
Videos,
News,
Sitemap
...and much more!
|