ABSTRACT

First published in 1954, Human Society in Ethics and Politics is Bertrand Russell’s last full account of his ethical and political positions relating to both politics and religion. Ethics, he argues, are necessary to man because of the conflict between intelligence and impulse – if one were without the other, there would be no place for ethics. Man’s impulses and desires are equally social and solitary. Politics and ethics are the means by which we as a society and as individuals become socially purposeful and moral codes inculcate our rules of action.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

Part I Ethics

chapter 1|14 pages

SOURCES OF ETHICAL BELIEFS AND FEELINGS

chapter 2|6 pages

MORAL CODES

chapter 3|8 pages

MORALITY AS A MEANS

chapter 4|10 pages

GOOD AND BAD

chapter 5|12 pages

PARTIAL AND GENERAL GOODS

chapter 6|17 pages

MORAL OBLIGATION

chapter 7|11 pages

SIN

chapter 8|10 pages

ETHICAL CONTROVERSY

chapter 9|9 pages

IS THERE ETHICAL KNOWLEDGE?

chapter 10|12 pages

AUTHORITY IN ETHICS

chapter 11|8 pages

PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION

chapter 12|7 pages

SUPERSTITIOUS ETHICS

chapter 13|8 pages

ETHICAL SANCTIONS

part |2 pages

PART II The Conflict of Passions

chapter 1|5 pages

FROM ETHICS TO POLITICS

chapter 2|16 pages

POLITICALLY IMPORTANT DESIRES

chapter 3|13 pages

FORETHOUGHT AND SKILL

chapter 4|11 pages

MYTH AND MAGIC

chapter 5|10 pages

COHESION AND RIVALRY

chapter 6|6 pages

SCIENTIFIC TECHNIQUE AND THE FUTURE

chapter 7|9 pages

WILL RELIGIOUS FAITH CURE OUR TROUBLES?

chapter 8|6 pages

CONQUEST?

chapter 9|7 pages

STEPS TOWARDS A STABLE PEACE

chapter 10|7 pages

PROLOGUE OR EPILOGUE?