Philosophical papers, 1896-99
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Philosophical papers, 1896-99
(The collected papers of Bertrand Russell / general editor, John Passmore, v. 2)
Unwin Hyman, 1990
Available at 96 libraries
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Note
Bibliography: p. 599-617
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume of the Collected Papers includes Russell's earliest philosophical writings, collected here for the first time. The 1896-1898 papers, few of which were published in Russell's lifetime, concentrate primarily on physics, arithmetic, and the concept of quantity. Several views that later became well-known in his "The Principles of Mathematics" actually originate in this earlier work and, though incomplete, "An Analysis of Mathematical Reasoning" forms the centrepiece of the volume. Writings from early in 1889, where he advances beyond his initial insights and develops a range of new ideas in the philosophy of logic, form the remainder of the volume.
Table of Contents
- Part 1 The dialectic of the sciences (1896-99): note on the logic of the sciences (c.1896)
- various notes on mathematical philosophy (1896-98)
- four notes on dynamics (c.1896)
- review of Hannequin, "Essai critique sur l'hypothese des atomes dans la science contemporaine" (1896)
- on some difficulties of continuous quantity (1896)
- review of Couturat, "De l'infini mathematique" (1897)
- on the relations of number and quantity (1897)
- the philosophy of matter (1897)
- on the conception of matter in mixed mathematics (1897)
- motion in a plenum (1897)
- why do we regard time, but not space, as necessarily a plenum? (1897), review of love, theoretical mechanics (1898)
- on causality as used in dynamics (1898)
- review of Goblot, "Essai sur la classification des sciences" (1898)
- on quantity and allied conceptions (1898)
- the classification of relations (1899)
- review of Meinong, "Ueber die bedeutung des Weber'schen Gesetzes" (1899). Part 2 An analysis of mathematical reasoning (1898): an analysis of mathematical reasoning being an inquiry into the subject-matter, the fundamental conceptions, and the necessary postulates of mathematics (1898)
- a manuscript material
- typescript material
- fragments of early drafts. Part 3 Philosophy of mathematics (1898-99): on the principles of arithmetic (1898)
- the fundamental ideas and axioms of mathematics (1899)
- synoptic table of contents
- notes and drafts
- fragments of Part 1. Part 4 Geometry (1898-99): on the constituents of space and their mutual relations (1898)
- are Euclid's axioms empirical? (1898)
- note on order (1898)
- notes on geometry (1899)
- the axioms of geometry (1899). Appendices: French texts
- miscellaneous notes
- extracts from Russell's mathematical notebook of 1896
- lost papers
- versos from paper 3
- reading lists for the philosophy of dynamics (c.1897).
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