preface by Ray Monk to John G. Slater's Bertrand Russell
* Source: Bertrand Russell, by John G. Slater; with a preface by Ray Monk. Bristol, England; Thoemmes Press, 1994. xii, 171 p. (Bristol Introductions series)Slater is thus the perfect person to write a general introduction to Russell's work and the present book has been eagerly anticipated for some time. It does not disappoint. Perhaps alone among introductions to Russell's work, it does not confine itself to that small portion of Russell's vast oeuvre that has received attention among professional philosophers. Russell published over sixty books and more than two thousand articles, Naturally, these are not all of equal importance: Principia Mathematica is one of the most significant contributions to the intellectual history of the twentieth century, while Satan in the Suburbs is just an embarrassment; again, 'On Denoting', Russell's famous 1905 article, has had and will continue to have a central place in the philosophical literature, while 'Should Socialists Smoke Good Cigars?', a piece he wrote for an American newspaper in 1932, is, like many such pieces he wrote, merely ephemeral.
John Slater's book provides a useful corrective to the usual academic approach, and, I hope, will do something to help reverse the trend. It is, assuredly, the most wide-ranging short introduction to Russell's work available. For an undergraduate student of philosophy, the most useful chapters will, admittedly, be chapters 2 to 6, in which Slater provides an excellent and admirably clear summary of the work of Russell's that has had the greatest impact upon the development of analytical philosophy - though, even here, his range of citations is considerably greater than that of other commentators. His discussions of Russell's metaphysics and epistemology are, I think, especially good and provide one of the best short summaries available of Russell's work after 1912, which is when conventional accounts of Russell's philosophy usually begin to lose interest.
In his three chapters of Russell's ethics, religious views and political theory, Slater does well to provide some sort of link between Russell as a philosopher and Russell as a public figure. Russell's views in these areas were highly publicized during his lifetime and did much to establish his reputation as a philosopher with something to say about important issues in everyday life. As Slater shows, however, Russell was not just reacting to topical questions, but establishing for himself a general, one might almost say philosophical, position of the perennial question of how one should live.
I am, I must confess, rather sceptical about whether Russell's views on the writing of history really deserve a chapter of their own. Certainly, it seems excessive to devote to them as much space as to his work on logic and the foundations of mathematics. Russell as a historian of philosophy is an interesting topic; his History of Western Philosophy remains, after all, the most popular single volume work of its kind in print and (despite being the subject of scorn and disapproval among professional historians of philosophy) has had a considerable influence. But, even after reading John Slater on the subject, I remain unconvinced that Russell has much that is original and interesting to say about history generally or that How to Read and Understand History is an important work.
This raises my only general qualm about the book. Slater is, I think, generous to a fault in his accounts of Russell's opinions. Russell expressed opinions about such a vast array of subjects that it would be amazing if some of them at least were not utter folly and I would have appreciated rather more indications from Slater as to where, in his view, Russell was being foolish. Such criticism, however, pales beside the pleasure in having in such an accessible form the benefit of Slater's unrivalled knowledge of Russell's work. It is the best kind of introduction: one that seeks not to replace the work its summarizes but rather to lead people to read it for themselves. It is like a guidebook of a vast and little-explored country. Speaking as a tourist who strayed into this particular country several years ago and has felt lost ever since, I can say with assurance that this is one of the best and most reliable guidebooks available.
Ray Monk
University of Southampton. 1994