Bertrand Russell; philosopher of the century. Essays in his honour edited by Ralph Schoenman. - [1st American ed.] - Boston : Little, Brown, [1967]. - 326 p.

"An Atlantic monthly press book."

Includes bibliographies.

Fifty years; 1916-1966, by C. Malleson.--An old friendship, by J. Trevelyan.--Fifty years' influence, by V. Purcell.--To oppose the stream, by I. F. Stone.--Civil disobedience and morals, by M. Scott.--Prophets and priests, by E. Fromm.--Would civilization survive a nuclear war? By L. Pauling.--The relevance of style, by A. Huxley.--A philosophical debt, by H. Read.--Some personal impressions of Russell as a philosopher. Some remarks on sense-perception. By C.D. Broad.--Reflections of a physicist, by M. Born.--An early appreciation, by H. Reichenbach.--Rudolf Carnap: the cross currents, by M. Reichenbach.--Russell's concept of philosophy, by W. Bloch.--An appraisal of Bertrand Russell's philosophy, by A. J. Ayer.--Existence and description in formal logic, by D. Scott.--Mathematical logic: what has it done for the philosophy of mathematics? By G. Kreisel.--The thesis that mathematics is logic, by H. Putnam.--Russell's ontological development, by W. V. Quine.


Russell, Bertrand, 1872-1970.

B1649 R94 / S3