ABSTRACT

The Collected Papers 28 signals reinvigoration of Russell the public campaigner. The title of the volume is taken from one of his most famous and eloquent short essays and probably the best known of his many broadcasts for the BBC. Man's Peril, 1954-55 not only captures the essence of Russell's thinking about nuclear weapons and the Cold War in the mid-1950s, its extraordinary impact served to jolt him into political protest once again. The activism of which we glimpse the initial stirrings in this volume continued in various guises more or less without interruption until his death. In the writings assembled in this volume, however, he is looking towards the non-aligned states and world scientific opinion as possible brokers of détente. (The volume includes Russell's famous public statement, the declaration of scientists known as 'The Russell Einstein Manifesto'.) Although Russell was becoming increasingly immersed in work for peace, this was not to the exclusion of all other interests. For example, here we find also him reminiscing about his peace campaigning during the First World War, defending 'History as an Art', and attacking the obscurantism of obscenity legislation and the opponents of birth control.

chapter

Introduction

part I|90 pages

Implications of the Hydrogen Bomb

chapter 3|2 pages

Atomic Weapons [1954]

chapter 4|3 pages

Scientific Warfare [1954]

chapter 4a|1 pages

T.V.—Tuesday, 13 April

chapter 4b|3 pages

The Hydrogen Bomb

chapter 12|2 pages

Two Papers on India [1954]

chapter 12a|2 pages

What India Can Do For Mankind

chapter 15|1 pages

Communism and War [1954]

chapter 16|8 pages

Man’s Peril [1954]

part II|52 pages

Autobiographical, Biographical, Historical and Commendatory Writings

chapter 17|2 pages

Sir Stanley Unwin [1954]

chapter 18|1 pages

Tribute to Einstein [1954]

chapter 20|1 pages

Bernard Shaw [1954]

chapter 21|3 pages

How I Write [1954]

chapter 22|16 pages

History as an Art [1954]

chapter 23|3 pages

Men of Genius [1954]

chapter 25b|4 pages

From Logic to Politics

part III|96 pages

Liberty, Morality, Religion and Other Prognoses and Prescriptions

chapter 29|7 pages

Suspicion [1954]

chapter 32|1 pages

Secrets of Happiness [1954]

chapter 32a|5 pages

You and Your Family

chapter 32b|4 pages

You and Your Work

chapter 32c|5 pages

You and Your Leisure

chapter 32d|4 pages

You and the State

chapter 36c|4 pages

Education in 2000 a.d. [1955]

chapter 36d|5 pages

The State in 2000 a.d. [1955]

chapter 40|3 pages

Religion and Morality [1955]

chapter 40a|3 pages

Christianity and Morals

part IV|160 pages

Roads to Peace

chapter 45a|1 pages

Peril in the East

chapter 46|1 pages

Could Britain Fight? [1955]

chapter 51|5 pages

Can Man Survive? [1955]

chapter 52|2 pages

Children of Hiroshima [1955]

chapter 53|6 pages

The Road to Peace (1) [1955]

chapter 55|7 pages

The Choice Is Ours [1955]

chapter 56|7 pages

Steps towards Peace [1955]

chapter 57c|2 pages

Letter to Heads of State

chapter 57d|4 pages

The Russell-Einstein Manifesto

chapter 59a|1 pages

Move by World Parliamentarians

chapter 60|21 pages

The Road to Peace (ii) [1955]

chapter 61b|8 pages

Atomic Energy