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What I Believe ([New ed.])

Part of the Routledge Classics series
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Nothing is sacred. Sex, morality, politics, society - all are fair game for Bertrand Russell's acerbic wit and keen eye.

With What I Believe first published in 1925, Russell took on organized religion.

Along with Why I Am Not a Christian, this essay must rank as the most articulate example of Russell's famed atheism.

It is also one of the most notorious. Used as evidence in a 1940 court case in which Russell was declared unfit to teach college-level philosophy, What I Believe was to become one of his most defining works.

The ideas contained within were and are controversial, contentious and - to the religious - downright blasphemous.

More than three-quarters of a century after it was written, the arguments within this essay continue to challenge one's faith and assumptions.

A remarkable work, it remains the best concise introduction to Russell's thought.

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Product Details
Routledge
0415325099 / 9780415325097
Paperback / softback
211.4
02/02/2004
United Kingdom
English
xvii, 48 p.
20 cm
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