2nd Edition

Human Knowledge: Its Scope and Value

By Bertrand Russell Copyright 1992
    548 Pages
    by Routledge

    548 Pages
    by Routledge

    Russell's classic examination of the relation between individual experience and the general body of scientific knowledge. It is a rigorous examination of the problems of an empiricist epistemology.

    INTRODUCTION PART I. THE WORLD OF SCIENCE PART II. LANGUAGE PART III. SCIENCE AND PERCEPTION HUMAN KNOWLEDGE: ITS SCOPE AND LIMITS PART IV. SCIENTIFIC CONCEPTS PART V. PROBABILITY PART VI. POSTULATES OF SCIENTIFIC INFERENCE

    Biography

    Bertrand Russell, Introduction by John G. Slater University of Toronto

    `It is the nearest thing to a systematic philosophy written by one who does not believe in systems of philosophy. Its scope is encyclopedic ... a joy to read.' - Sydney Hook, New York Times

    `His intelligibility comes of stating things directly as he himself sees them, sharply defined and readily crystallised in the best English philosophical style.' - TLS

    `Of peculiar importance in that it is an exemplar, for the general reader, of Russell's special contribution to human knowledge. In it he applies with his usual lucidity and wit, the methods of inquiry, which he has done so much to develop, to the question of how we come to know whatever we do know about the universe.' - The Observer