Bertrand Arthur William Russell
Born: 18 May 1872 in Ravenscroft, Trelleck,
Monmouthshire, Wales
Died: 2 Feb 1970 in Penrhyndeudraeth,
Merioneth, Wales
Bertrand Russell published a large number of books on logic, the
theory of knowledge, and many other topics. He is one of the most
important logicians of the 20th Century.
Russell's Mathematical Contributions
Over a long and varied career, Bertrand Russell made
ground-breaking contributions to the foundations of mathematics and
to the development of contemporary formal logic, as well as to
analytic philosophy. His contributions relating to mathematics
include his discovery of Russell's paradox, his defense of logicism
(the view that mathematics is, in some significant sense, reducible
to formal logic), his introduction of the theory of types, and his
refining and popularizing of the first-order predicate calculus.
Along with Kurt Gödel, he is usually credited with being one of
the two most important logicians of the twentieth century.
Russell discovered the paradox which bears his name in May 1901,
while working on his Principles of Mathematics (1903).
The paradox arose in connection with the set of all sets which are
not members of themselves. Such a set, if it exists, will be a
member of itself if and only if it is not a member of itself. The
significance of the paradox follows since, in classical logic, all
sentences are entailed by a contradiction. In the eyes of many
mathematicians (including David Hilbert and Luitzen Brouwer) it
therefore appeared that no proof could be trusted once it was
discovered that the logic apparently underlying all of mathematics
was contradictory. A large amount of work throughout the early part
of this century in logic, set theory, and the philosophy and
foundations of mathematics was thus prompted.
Russell's paradox arises as a result of naive set theory's
so-called unrestricted comprehension (or abstraction) axiom.
Originally introduced by Georg Cantor, the axiom states that any
predicate expression, P(x), which contains x
as a free variable, will determine a set whose members are exactly
those objects which satisfy P(x). The axiom gives
form to the intuition that any coherent condition may be used to
determine a set (or class). Most attempts at resolving Russell's
paradox have therefore concentrated on various ways of restricting
or abandoning this axiom.
Russell's own response to the paradox came with the introduction
of his theory of types. His basic idea was that reference to
troublesome sets (such as the set of all sets which are not members
of themselves) could be avoided by arranging all sentences into a
hierarchy (beginning with sentences about individuals at the lowest
level, sentences about sets of individuals at the next lowest level,
sentences about sets of sets of individuals at the next lowest
level, etc.). Using the vicious circle principle also adopted by
Henri Poincaré, together with his so-called "no class"
theory of classes, Russell was then able to explain why the
unrestricted comprehension axiom fails: propositional functions,
such as the function "x is a set", should not be
applied to themselves since self-application would involve a vicious
circle. On this view, it follows that it is possible to refer to a
collection of objects for which a given condition (or predicate)
holds only if they are all at the same level or of the same "type".
Although first introduced by Russell in 1903 in the Principles,
his theory of types finds its mature expression in his 1908 article
Mathematical Logic as Based on the Theory of Types and
in the monumental work he co-authored with Alfred North Whitehead,
Principia Mathematica (1910, 1912, 1913). Thus, in its
details, the theory admits of two versions, the "simple theory"
and the "ramified theory". Both versions of the theory
later came under attack. For some, they were too weak since they
failed to resolve all of the known paradoxes. For others, they were
too strong since they disallowed many mathematical definitions
which, although consistent, violated the vicious circle principle.
Russell's response to the second of these objections was to
introduce, within the ramified theory, the axiom of reducibility.
Although the axiom successfully lessened the vicious circle
principle's scope of application, many claimed that it was simply
too ad hoc to be justified philosophically.
Of equal significance during this same period was Russell's
defense of logicism, the theory that mathematics was in some
important sense reducible to logic. First defended in his Principles,
and later in more detail in Principia Mathematica,
Russell's logicism consisted of two main theses. The first is that
all mathematical truths can be translated into logical truths or, in
other words, that the vocabulary of mathematics constitutes a proper
subset of that of logic. The second is that all mathematical proofs
can be recast as logical proofs or, in other words, that the
theorems of mathematics constitute a proper subset of those of
logic.
Like Gottlob Frege, Russell's basic idea for defending logicism
was that numbers may be identified with classes of classes and that
number-theoretic statements may be explained in terms of quantifiers
and identity. Thus the number 1 would be identified with the class
of all unit classes, the number 2 with the class of all two-membered
classes, and so on. Statements such as "there are two books"
would be recast as "there is a book, x, and there is a
book, y, and x is not identical to y".
It followed that number-theoretic operations could be explained in
terms of set-theoretic operations such as intersection, union, and
the like. In Principia Mathematica, Whitehead and
Russell were able to provide detailed derivations of many major
theorems in set theory, finite and transfinite arithmetic, and
elementary measure theory. A fourth volume on geometry was planned
but never completed.
In much the same way that Russell wanted to use logic to clarify
issues in the foundations of mathematics, he also wanted to use
logic to clarify issues in philosophy. As one of the founders of "analytic
philosophy", Russell is remembered for his work using
first-order logic to show how a broad range of denoting phrases
could be recast in terms of predicates and quantified variables.
Thus, he is also remembered for his emphasis upon the importance of
logical form for the resolution of many related philosophical
problems. Here, as in mathematics, it was Russell's hope that by
applying logical machinery and insights one would be able to resolve
otherwise intractable difficulties.
Russell's Life and Public Influence
Russell was born the grandson of Lord John Russell, who had twice
served as Prime Minister under Queen Victoria. Following the death
of his mother (in 1874) and of his father (in 1876), Russell and his
brother went to live with their grandparents. (Although Russell's
father had granted custody of Russell and his brother to two
atheists, Russell's grandparents had little difficulty in getting
his will overturned.)
Following the death of his grandfather (in 1878), Russell was
raised by his grandmother, Lady Russell. Educated at first
privately, and later at Trinity College, Cambridge, Russell obtained
first class degrees both in mathematics and in the moral sciences.
Although elected to the Royal Society in 1908, Russell's career at
Trinity appeared to come to an end in 1916 when he was convicted and
fined for anti-war activities. He was dismissed from the College as
a result of the conviction. (The details of the dismissal are
recounted in Bertrand Russell and Trinity (1942) by
G.H. Hardy. Two years later Russell was convicted a second time.
This time he spent six months in prison. It was while in prison that
he wrote his well-received Introduction to Mathematical
Philosophy (1919). He did not return to Trinity until 1944.
Married four times and notorious for his many affairs, Russell also
ran unsuccessfully for Parliament, in 1907, 1922, and 1923. Together
with his second wife, he opened and ran an experimental school
during the late 1920s and early 1930s. He became the third Earl
Russell upon the death of his brother in 1931.
While teaching in the United States in the late 1930s, Russell was
offered a teaching appointment at City College, New York. The
appointment was revoked following a large number of public protests
and a judicial decision, in 1940, which stated that he was morally
unfit to teach at the College. Nine years later he was awarded the
Order of Merit. He received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1950.
During the 1950s and 1960s, Russell became something of an
inspiration to large numbers of idealistic youth as a result of his
continued anti-war and anti-nuclear protests. Together with Albert
Einstein, he released the Russell-Einstein Manifesto in 1955,
calling for the curtailment of nuclear weapons. In 1957, he was a
prime organizer of the first Pugwash Conference, which brought
together scientists concerned about the proliferation of nuclear
weapons. He became the founding president of the Campaign for
Nuclear Disarmament in 1958 and was once again imprisoned, this time
in connection with anti-nuclear protests, in 1961. Upon appeal, his
two-month prison sentence was reduced to one week in the prison
hospital. He remained a prominent public figure until his death nine
years later at the age of 97.
A.D. Irvine, irvine@plato.stanford.edu
or irvine@unixg.ubc.ca.