ABSTRACT

'Every man would like to be God, if it were possible; some few find it difficult to admit the impossibility.' - Bertrand Russell
From 1931-1935 Bertrand Russell was one of the regular contributors to the literary pages of the New York American, together with other distinguished authors, such as Aldous Huxley and Vita Sackville-West. Mortals and Others Volume II presents a further selection of his essays, ranging from the politically correct, to the perfectly obscure: from The Prospects of Democracy to Men Versus Insects.
Even though written in the politically heated climate of the 1930s, these essays are surprisingly topical and engaging for the present day reader. Volume II of Mortals and Others serves as a splendid, fresh introduction to the compassionate eclecticism of Bertrand Russell's mind.

chapter |2 pages

Christmas at Sea

chapter |2 pages

How People Economise

chapter |2 pages

Do Dogs Think?

chapter |2 pages

How People Take Failure

chapter |2 pages

On Conceit

chapter |2 pages

On Bores

chapter |2 pages

Politics and Sport

chapter |2 pages

On Reticence

chapter |2 pages

The Good Old Days

chapter |2 pages

On Becoming Civilised

chapter |2 pages

On the Art of Persuading

chapter |2 pages

The Prospects of Democracy

chapter |2 pages

The Admiration of Strength

chapter |2 pages

The Triumph of Stupidity

chapter |2 pages

On Utilitarianism

chapter |2 pages

On Race Hatred

chapter |2 pages

The Spirit of Adventure

chapter |2 pages

What Makes People Likeable

chapter |2 pages

On Self-Righteousness

chapter |2 pages

On Propriety

chapter |2 pages

I Escape from Progress

chapter |2 pages

Experts and Oligarchs

chapter |2 pages

On Being Ashamed of Virtue

chapter |2 pages

Men versus Insects

chapter |2 pages

On Orthodoxies

chapter |2 pages

Means to Ends

chapter |2 pages

Individualist Ethics

chapter |3 pages

The Cult of the Individual

chapter |2 pages

On Being Argumentative

chapter |2 pages

On Mediaevalism

chapter |2 pages

In Praise of Dullness

chapter |2 pages

The End of Pioneering

chapter |2 pages

Combating Cruelty

chapter |2 pages

On Discipline

chapter |2 pages

Expecting the Millennium

chapter |3 pages

The Churches and War

chapter |2 pages

On Loving Our Neighbours

chapter |2 pages

On Self-Control

chapter |2 pages

Respect for Law 41

chapter |2 pages

On Euthanasia

chapter |2 pages

On Equality

chapter |2 pages

The Father of the Family

chapter |2 pages

On Adult Education

chapter |2 pages

On Curious Beliefs

chapter |2 pages

Competitive Ethics

chapter |2 pages

Is Anybody Normal?

chapter |2 pages

Egoism

chapter |2 pages

Back to Nature?

chapter |2 pages

Parental Affection

chapter |2 pages

Irrational Opinions

chapter |2 pages

Science and Happiness

chapter |2 pages

Social Sciences in Schools

chapter |2 pages

Race and Nationality

chapter |2 pages

The Problem of Leisure

chapter |2 pages

What to Believe

chapter |2 pages

Instinct in Human Beings

chapter |2 pages

Fashions in Virtues

chapter |2 pages

On Comets 59

chapter |2 pages

Fear and Amusement

chapter |2 pages

On Curious Learning 64

chapter |2 pages

On Being Important

chapter |2 pages

Censorship by Progressives

chapter |2 pages

Protecting the Ego

chapter |2 pages

Climate and Saintliness

chapter |2 pages

Why Travel?

chapter |2 pages

Obscure Fame

chapter |2 pages

Insanity and Insight

chapter |2 pages

On Ceremony

chapter |3 pages

Love of Money

chapter |2 pages

On Specialising

chapter |2 pages

Good Manners and Hypocrisy

chapter |2 pages

On Being Insulting

chapter |2 pages

Vigorous and Feeble Epochs

chapter |2 pages

The Decrease of Knowledge