Academic literature on the topic 'Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation"

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Shough, Martin. "Listen to what the man said." Journal of Beatles Studies 2024, Spring (May 2024): 35–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/jbs.2024.4.

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In 2009 the magazine Prospect published an interview with Paul McCartney in which he described a 1966 meeting with philosopher Bertrand Russell (Power 2009). McCartney recalled discussing Russell’s moral objections to the war in Vietnam and later reporting these back to the other Beatles in terms that impressed them, at a time when they had yet to become vocal on the subject. Press reaction was largely derisory, couched in terms that prompted the article’s author to publicly criticize a pattern of reflexive misrepresentation of McCartney in the press. Typically, journalists scorned McCartney’s account, to the extent of doubting that a meeting with Bertrand Russell occurred at all. McCartney was widely accused of rewriting history to cast himself in the kind of political and intellectual role more typically accorded to John Lennon. We attempt to clarify this dispute with reference to documentary and anecdotal sources, finding independent evidence not only that this meeting occurred but also that, upon learning that McCartney was pursuing an anti-war film vehicle for the Beatles, Bertrand Russell actively facilitated a meeting between McCartney and novelist and producer/screenwriter Len Deighton; in the same time frame McCartney was meeting with civil rights and Vietnam war crimes activist Mark Lane, then a director of Bertrand Russell’s Peace Foundation, to discuss the New York attorney’s controversial book on the Kennedy assassination, the film version of which McCartney subsequently offered to score. The fact that McCartney was apparently alone in pursuing projects of this sort at this time, months before film director Dick Lester announced John Lennon’s acceptance of a part in How I Won the War , is in tension with popular narratives in which he is portrayed as a follower and superficial tunesmith. Journalistic accusations of dishonesty on the part of McCartney in 2008 are here examined and rebutted, and specific questions raised about the claimed timeline of events in 1966 are addressed in detail. The argument is of obvious interest in Beatles historiography, as accusations of self-serving revisionism on the part of McCartney have become a commonplace of fan criticism, especially since the death of Lennon. More generally, it speaks in a timely way to wider concerns about declining journalistic professionalism and integrity (Newman and Fletcher 2017), and related issues of poor media literacy and an increasing public mistrust of traditional news and opinion sources (Gibson et al. 2022). This article was published open access under a CC BY licence: https://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0 .
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Carey, Rosalind. "Peace Profile: Bertrand Russell." Peace Review 15, no. 1 (March 2003): 105–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1040265032000059814.

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Blitz, David. "Bertrand Russell on Nuclear War, Peace, and Language." Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 23, no. 2 (December 2003): 176–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/rss.2003.0007.

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Bishop, Alan. "“The Fruit of Many Years”: Bertrand Russell and Vera Brittain." Russell: the Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 39 (January 25, 2020): 121–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.15173/russell.v39i2.4207.

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In her dedicated promotion of feminism and pacifism, especially during the 1930s, Vera Brittain (1893–1970) was strongly influenced by Ber­trand Russell’s writings, especially Marriage and Morals (1929) and Which Way to Peace? (1936). Both were members of the Peace Pledge Union, and she continued as a sponsor after Russell abandoned his pac­ifism soon after the beginning of the Second World War. She admired his political and social activism in the aftermath of that war, endorsing it as much as her family situation allowed; and, as chairman of the Peace News board, Brittain intervened in Russell’s support when a dispute broke out between him and the editor. Although their rela­tionship was personally limited, Russell’s influence on her opinions and actions was profound.
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Lind, Andreas Gonçalves, and Bruno Nobre. "Competing Narratives in the Russell-Copleston Debate." Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 76, no. 4 (January 31, 2021): 1363–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.17990/rpf/2020_76_4_1363.

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In 1948, Bertrand Russell and Frederick Copleston entertained us with a radiophonic debate, on the BBC, concerning the rational proofs of God’s existence. This debate is primarily a product of Authors’ mindset. In this sense, every argument on each side presupposes a universal reason from which human intellect can grasp a certain degree of truth. Therefore, we would expect that the debate 75 years old to be outdated. Or maybe, Russell’s agnostic position could, at first sight, seem to be more aligned with a contemporary post-modern mindset than Copleston’s theism. However, we disagree with the aforementioned thesis. We will not argue that Copleston won the debate by means of reason alone. We will rather show that both positions emerge from different ontologies. And these ones are intertwined with specific narratives and its respective ways of life. For that matter, the Russell-Copleston debate substantiates the thesis of Radical Orthodoxy. Deep down, John Milbank’s “ontology of peace,” as opposed to the Nietzschean nihilism, emerges from this debate. In this sense, while Copleston’s argumentation grounds this narrative on an ontology of peace, Russell tends to follow in a nihilism capable of destroying the communion between different persons. In this sense, the debate is still up to date.
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Didikin, A. B., and D. G. Trinitka. "Definitions and methodological principles in theory of knowledge / trans. from Engl. A. B. Didikin, D. G. Trinitka." Omsk Scientific Bulletin. Series Society. History. Modernity 7, no. 1 (2022): 91–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.25206/2542-0488-2022-7-1-91-96.

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A translation of an article by the great British philosopher Bertrand Russell on the conceptualisation of the philosophical foundations of epistemology is presented. It formulates key definitions and justifies the methodological principles on the basis of which will be possible to construct theories consistent with the ideas of empiricism and the concept of knowledge by acquaintance. Drawing on concrete examples as well as the theses on the logical conditioning of the methods of cognition, Russell lays the foundation for the theory of neutral monism, which became the basis of his epistemological ideas in the early period of his work.
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Qadir Sabir, Aram. "The Relationship between the World and Language in Bertrand Russell's Philosophy." Journal of University of Raparin 10, no. 4 (December 29, 2023): 302–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.26750/vol(10).no(4).paper14.

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In the contemporary philosophy and more specifically in philosophy of language, one of the essential issues of philosophical studies is the relationship between language, the World and knowledge about the world. Bertrand Russell as one of the leaders in logical analysis in contemporary philosophy considers logical foundation as significant pillar for language. He defines language, meaning knowledge in the context of logic and he forms the world in the logical facts. From here, a link between language and reality will be created, and thus there is an intention to break the other traditions. Bertrand Russell tried to write many books and essays and his literary heritage has become an important asset in philosophical discourses. This study aims under the Russell’s arguments to analyze the relationship between language and the world. It attempts from a different perspective to reach a different form of existence and world. This purpose helps in language activities in manifesting correct knowledge about the world that it has facts, events, state of affairs, reality and logic. Russell's attempts to connect between language and reality in the world produced many valuable arguments and thesis. This is on the foundation of logical analysis changes language to propositions and changes the world to facts instead of things. In addition, arranges all theories about meaning, descriptions, proper names and knowledge through the atomic propositions. Furthermore, he based his understanding to the external world, existing of things and the relations between them on logical language.
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Mehta, Harish C. "North Vietnam’s Informal Diplomacy with Bertrand Russell: Peace Activism and the International War Crimes Tribunal." Peace & Change 37, no. 1 (January 2012): 64–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0130.2011.00732.x.

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Urban, Eva. "‘Actors in the Same Tragedy’: Bertrand Russell, Humanism, and The Conquest of Happiness." New Theatre Quarterly 31, no. 4 (October 9, 2015): 343–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266464x15000652.

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In Writings on Cities Henri Lefebvre calls for a ‘renewed right to urban life’. He maintains that ‘we must thus make the effort to reach out towards a new humanism, a new praxis, another man, that of urban society’. City spaces are used in a number of contemporary Irish site-specific theatre productions to explore histories of oppression and social injustice, and to imagine a new humanist praxis for society. The international multi-artform production The Conquest of Happiness (2013) was inspired by Bertrand Russell’s commitment to human happiness in defiance of war and suffering in his book The Conquest of Happiness (1930) and in his many political and philosophical writings. In this article Eva Urban critically examines the ways in which the performance in Northern Ireland attempted to embody Russell’s humanism and related critical concepts to encourage active citizenship. She considers to what extent the dramaturgical options employed inthe production applied Russell’s ideas and those of other thinkers by developing critical representations of inhumanity, challenging authoritarianism, and exploring humanist ideals. Eva Urban is a British Academy Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Faculty of English, University of Cambridge, and an Associate of Clare Hall, Cambridge. She is theauthor of Community Politics and the Peace Process in Contemporary Northern Irish Drama (Peter Lang, 2011) and her articles on political drama and Irish studies have been published in New Theatre Quarterly, Etudes Irlandaises, and Caleidoscopio.
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Tully, R. E. "Pre-Vintage Russell." Dialogue 26, no. 1 (1987): 147–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0012217300042360.

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The general editorial plan behind The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell calls for two parallel series, one concerned with Russell's work on philosophy, logic and mathematics, the other with his less technical contributions in areas such as politics, practical ethics, history and education. Volume 1, sub-titled Cambridge Essays, 1888–99, is in a sense the ancestral volume of both series, for it comprises both technical and non-technical subjects. Russell appears here as diarist, public speaker, political commentator, as well as apprentice philosopher and expert on non-Euclidian geometries. The Collected Papers as a whole will span the more than 80 years of Russell's writings devoted to a formidable range of topics from the personal to the highly abstract but, large as it is, this publishing project will make no attempt to bring together the totality of his writings, since many of these remain in print and are readily available. Instead, the project's distinct emphasis will be on Russell's shorter writings, such as essays, articles, reviews and speeches, which are not so easily located, even when previously published. Grouped together in convenient subdivisions, these papers will chronicle for us Russell's intellectual and social growth to an extent even greater than that attempted by Russell himself in his three-volume Autobiography or in My Philosophical Development, and they will also serve to acquaint us with the thoughts, feelings and attitudes of the venerable figure behind the well-known major books. The project's essential aim, then, is to mine and refine the vast Russell Archives in a way that will yield a permanent foundation of study for anyone, whether mere admirer or life-long scholar, who has any interest in Russell's life and work.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation"

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Valle, Júlio César Augusto do. "Insubordina-te, educação matemática! responsabilidade e paz em Bertrand Russell." Universidade de São Paulo, 2015. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/48/48134/tde-12052015-134319/.

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O propósito do presente estudo consiste em construir uma relação entre as teorizações de Bertrand Russell matemático e filósofo de expressão no século XX e as preocupações mais recentes de matemáticos e educadores matemáticos contemporâneos, nomeadamente por meio das linhas de pesquisa emergentes nas últimas décadas, dentre as quais destaco a Etnomatemática, conforme a concebe Ubiratan DAmbrosio. Isto porque muito do debate acerca dos princípios e das motivações da educação matemática apresenta convergências muito relevantes com as mais importantes críticas russellianas aos modos de pensar e sentir da humanidade no século passado. Para isto, apoio-me no conceito de crise proposto em Hannah Arendt como um momento em que as respostas consolidadas pela tradição não respondem mais às questões emergentes da atualidade e, por isso, devemos reler os autores do passado como se ninguém jamais os houvesse lido antes. Afinal, afirma-se quase que consensualmente que a educação matemática encontra-se em crise e, inspirando-me em Arendt, sinto-me impelido à releitura de Russell para encontrar interpretações que colaborem para o enfrentamento das problemáticas em que nos debatemos. Remeto-me assiduamente à obra de Paulo Freire para fundamentar a perspectiva política da educação que também ocorre a Russell e a DAmbrosio. E daí decorre a elaboração de uma relação entre a obra russelliana e as quatro dimensões da paz propostas por DAmbrosio, que evidencia a atualidade da obra do filósofo. Considero este trabalho, efetivamente, uma construção em Filosofia da Educação Matemática que retoma em Russell aquilo que recentemente retornou ao centro das preocupações sociais, inclusive da perspectiva da educação matemática: nossas crises sociopolíticas, econômicas e ambientais. Trata-se, portanto, de um exame, inspirado em Russell, de nossas responsabilidades, como matemáticos e educadores matemáticos, com a paz em suas múltiplas dimensões algo que demanda insubordinações permanentes.
The purpose of this study is to build a relationship between the theories of Bertrand Russell mathematician and philosopher of expression in the twentieth century and the latest concerns of mathematicians and mathematics educators contemporaries, notably through emerging research areas in recent decades, among which highlight the Ethnomatematics, as conceived by Ubiratan D\'Ambrosio. This is because much of the debate about the principles and motivations of mathematics education has very relevant convergence with the most important russellian critics of the ways of thinking and feeling of humanity in the past century. For this, I support the concept of crisis proposed in Hannah Arendt as a time when the answers consolidated by tradition no longer respond to emerging issues of the day, and so we should reread the authors of the past as if no one had ever read them before. After all, it is said almost consensus that education mathematics is in crisis and, according to Arendt, I feel compelled to Russell rereading to find interpretations that collaborate to confront the problem in which we struggle. I refer myself assiduously to the work of Paulo Freire to support the political perspective of education that also occurs to Russell and D\'Ambrosio. And it follows the development of a relationship between Russell\'s work and the four dimensions of peace proposed by D\'Ambrosio, highlighting the relevance of the work of the philosopher. This is effectively a text in Mathematics Education Philosophy which takes in what Russell recently returned to the center of social concerns, including the perspective of mathematics education: our socio-political, economic and environmental crises. It is, therefore, an examination, inspired by Russell, of our responsibilities, as mathematicians and mathematics educators, with peace in their multiple dimensions something that demands permanent insubordination.
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Humphries, David. "Peace and Mind: Religion, Race, and Gender among Progressive Intellectuals and Activists." unrestricted, 2007. http://etd.gsu.edu/theses/available/etd-08062007-121143/.

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Thesis (M.A.)--Georgia State University, 2007.
Title from file title page. Ian Fletcher, committee chair; Jared Poley, Hugh Hudson, committee members. Electronic text (110 [i.e. 105] p.) : digital, PDF file. Pages 18, 45, 76, 77 and 95 blank. Description based on contents viewed Jan. 16, 2008. Includes bibliographical references (p. 100-110).
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Books on the topic "Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation"

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Ken, Coates, and Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation, eds. ENDpapers thirteen: EUREKA and Star Wars : incorporating the END bulletin of the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation and the Spokesman. Nottingham, England: The Foundation, 1986.

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Coates, Kenneth. Poverty and peace: The Bertrand Russell peace lecture. Nottingham: Spokesman, 1997.

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Russell, Bertrand. The selected letters of Bertrand Russell. London: Allen Lane, 1992.

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1953-, Schwerin Alan, and Bertrand Russell Society, eds. Bertrand Russell on nuclear war, peace, and language: Critical and historical essays. Westport, Conn: Praeger, 2002.

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Russell, Bertrand. The selected letters of Bertrand Russell. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1992.

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Russell, Bertrand. Yours faithfully, Bertrand Russell: A lifelong fight for peace, justice, and truth in letters to the editor. Chicago: Open Court, 2002.

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Russell, Bertrand. Yours faithfully, Bertrand Russell: A life long fight for peace, justice, and truth in letters to the editor. Chicago, Ill: Open Court, 2002.

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Spokesman 149: Drone Free Zone. Russell Peace Foundation, Bertrand, 2021.

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Coates, Ken. The Short Millennium (Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation: the Spokesman, 68). Spokesman Books, 2000.

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Disarming the New World Disorder (Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation: the Spokesman, 67). Spokesman Books, 2000.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation"

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Russell, Bertrand, Richard A. Rempel, Beryl Haslam, Andrew Bone, and Albert C. Lewis. "Bring Us Peace [1922]." In The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Volume 15, 380–82. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003557371-79.

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Russell, Bertrand, Richard A. Rempel, Louis Greenspan, Beryl Haslam, Albert C. Lewis, and Mark Lippincott. "Russia and Peace [1917]." In The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Volume 14, 165–66. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003557333-46.

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Russell, Bertrand, Richard A. Rempel, Bernd Frohmann, Mark Lippincott, and Margaret Moran. "Why Not Peace Negotiations?" In The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Volume 13, 418. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003556596-79.

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Russell, Bertrand, Richard A. Rempel, Bernd Frohmann, Mark Lippincott, and Margaret Moran. "Possible Guarantees of Peace." In The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Volume 13, 52–55. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003556596-13.

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Russell, Bertrand, Richard A. Rempel, Louis Greenspan, Beryl Haslam, Albert C. Lewis, and Mark Lippincott. "The Chances of Peace [1917]." In The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Volume 14, 187–88. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003557333-53.

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Russell, Bertrand, Richard A. Rempel, Louis Greenspan, Beryl Haslam, Albert C. Lewis, and Mark Lippincott. "The People and Peace [1917]." In The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Volume 14, 336–37. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003557333-91.

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Russell, Bertrand, Andrew G. Bone, and Michael D. Stevenson. "Peace and the World [1936]." In The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell Volume 21, 88–91. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003557340-25.

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Russell, Bertrand, Richard A. Rempel, Louis Greenspan, Beryl Haslam, Albert C. Lewis, and Mark Lippincott. "The German Peace Offer [1918]." In The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Volume 14, 398–99. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003557333-110.

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Russell, Bertrand, Andrew G. Bone, and Michael D. Stevenson. "How to Keep Peace [1935]." In The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell Volume 21, 54–57. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003557340-18.

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Russell, Bertrand, Andrew G. Bone, and Michael D. Stevenson. "How to Keep the Peace." In The Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell Volume 21, 34–36. London: Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003557340-12.

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