Written in response to the devastation of World War I, "Why Men Fight" lays out Bertrand Russell's ideas on war, pacifism, reason, impulse, and personal liberty. Russell argues that when individuals live passionately, they will have no desire for war or killing. Conversely, excessive restraint or reason causes us to live unnaturally and with hostility toward those who are unlike ourselves.
About the Author
Bertrand Russell (1872–1970) was a mathematician, philosopher, "active pacifist," and winner of the 1950 Nobel Prize for literature. He opposed war and nuclear weapons and advocated world government and peacemaking. He was a president of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and created the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation in 1963, and, later, its journal, THE SPOKESMAN.
Description:
Written in response to the devastation of World War I, "Why Men Fight" lays out Bertrand Russell's ideas on war, pacifism, reason, impulse, and personal liberty. Russell argues that when individuals live passionately, they will have no desire for war or killing. Conversely, excessive restraint or reason causes us to live unnaturally and with hostility toward those who are unlike ourselves.
About the Author
Bertrand Russell (1872–1970) was a mathematician, philosopher, "active pacifist," and winner of the 1950 Nobel Prize for literature. He opposed war and nuclear weapons and advocated world government and peacemaking. He was a president of the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and created the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation in 1963, and, later, its journal, THE SPOKESMAN.