Where is bertrand russell from




















His multifaceted career centered on work as a philosophy professor, writer, and public lecturer. Here is a detailed chronology of Russell's life, an overview of his analytic philosophy, and a complete bibliography of all his publications. Russell was an author of diverse scope. He was arguably the greatest philosopher of the 20th century and the greatest logician since Aristotle.

Back to top Back To Top Takes users back to the top of the page. Nobel Prizes Thirteen laureates were awarded a Nobel Prize in , for achievements that have conferred the greatest benefit to humankind. See them all presented here. After spending some months in Berlin studying social democracy, they went to live near Haslemere, where he devoted his time to the study of philosophy. In he visited the Mathematical Congress at Paris. In he wrote his first important book, The Principles of Mathematics , and with his friend Dr.

Alfred Whitehead proceeded to develop and extend the mathematical logic of Peano and Frege. From time to time he abandoned philosophy for politics.

In he was appointed lecturer at Trinity College. His college deprived him of his lectureship in He was offered a post at Harvard university, but was refused a passport. Russell's grandfather, Lord John Russell, twice prime minister to Queen Victoria, died 3 years later, and young Bertrand was left in the care of his grandmother, a lady of strict puritanical moral views who nevertheless gave him great affection and "that feeling of safety that children need. Russell's early education was provided at home by tutors, and in retrospect he found his childhood a happy one.

In adolescence, however, he experienced intense loneliness, relieved by "one of the great events of my life, as dazzling as first love. From that moment until [Alfred North] Whitehead and I finished Principia Mathematica, when I was 38, mathematics was my chief interest and my chief source of happiness.

When he was 18 years old, Russell entered Trinity College, Cambridge. Alfred North Whitehead was the first to sense Russell's extraordinary talent, and he quickly undertook to sponsor Russell among the Cambridge literati. In his second year at Cambridge Russell was elected to the Apostles, a weekly discussion group that since has included among its members many of the people of intellectual eminence at Cambridge.

There he met and formed close friendships with, among others, G. Lowes Dickinson, G. Of his generation at Cambridge, Russell later wrote, "We believed in ordered progress by means of politics and free discussion. After graduation Russell stayed on at Cambridge as a fellow of Trinity College and lecturer in philosophy. In he was dismissed because of a scandal over his conviction and fine for writing about the case of a conscientious objector in World War I.

His association with Cambridge meant a great deal to Russell, and he was deeply wounded by its abrupt termination. In , after overcoming the opposition of his family, Russell married an American girl, Alys Pearsall Smith. The first years of their marriage were largely spent traveling in Europe and in the United States, where Russell gave some lectures.

From this period his first book, comprising a set of lectures on German socialism, and his fellowship dissertation, An Essay on the Foundations of Geometry, date.



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