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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One genius or two?,
By A Customer
This review is from: BERTRAND RUSSELL: The Spirit of Solitude 1872-1921 (Hardcover)
Ray Monk makes it clear in this book that he dislikes Russell.As a hitherto ardent Russophile, this ought to have given me cause for concern that I would find problems with this book. I nonetheless recommend it to even those of a similar disposition to myself, it is probably the best biography (of any subject) that I have ever read. It attempts to be more probing and insightful (and thus results in being more contentious) than anything I have ever read concerning Russell's motivations, both conscious and otherwise. For someone who has taken us so far towards appreciating the tragic explanations for their subject's weaknesses, Ray Monk himself perhaps needs to explain why dislike has emerged rather than sysmpathy. Or perhaps answering this question is ultimately a job for this biographer's biographer?
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Nightmare Beyond the Pythagorean Dream,
By
This review is from: Russell: The Great Philosophers (The Great Philosophers Series) (Paperback)
This tiny book amazes me. Rather than attempt a biography, Monk focuses on one theme of Russell's life: his adventure with mathematics and the drive to reduce all of mathematics to logic, crystallized as a pristine whole of pure beauty -- the ultimate achievement of rational thought. Retracing the inspiration, successes, and ultimate defeat of that program, interpolating through the stages of Russell's own writings, Monk provides us with a glimpse of the integrity of a life committed to taking a major philosophical inquiry to an honest but unwanted and discouraging conclusion. In retracing the path of Russell's mathematical passion, Monk provides brief thumbnails of the major concepts that illuminated the route to today's mathematical logic and its foundational construction: one that in itself demonstrates the impossibility of a purely logical system that resolves all of mathematics as a wonder of deductive reasoning.
12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Best Russell Bio To Date,
By Edward Garea "Edward Garea" (Branchville, New Jersey United States) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: BERTRAND RUSSELL: The Spirit of Solitude 1872-1921 (Hardcover)
Question: How would Ray Monk follow his wildly successful biography of Ludwig Wittgenstein? Answer: He takes on the life of Wittgenstein's teacher, and the most public philosopher of the 20th century, Bertrand Russell.There are a myriad of biographies of Russell in and out of print; even the most ardent Russell admirer could easily admit burnout on this score. Russell himself penned an autobiography that lends itself more to literature than fact. Why should one spend money and time on yet another biography? Two reasons should suffice, I hope. Monk is a thorough biographer, but not an adoring one. Although some others have also been critical, none brings to the subject the background in analytical philosophy that Monk does, and this is an important factor when discussing the life and thought of a philosopher, for both are obviously and subtly interwined in the subject. Secondly, Russell was more than an academic philosopher, he was a public figure who was more well known than his philosophy. His life was lived in the pages of the press and made great fodder for the newshounds. Whether it was his many love affairs (including a disastrous one with poet T.S. Eliot's unstable wife Vivian) or his peace campaign during the first World War that led to his jailing by the English government, Russell always made good copy. Monk takes the reader behind the headlines to the events and forces that shaped the young Russell's life and philosophy. His partnership with Alfred North Whitehead in the co-authorship of Principia Mathematica is expertly handled, as is Russell's later dalliance with the Bloomsbury Group. This is the first of two projected volumes and I can't wait to read Part Two.
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