BRACERS Record Detail for 54129

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Collection code
RA3
Recent acquisition no.
75
Source if not BR
Harvard U. Archives
Recipient(s)
Perry, Ralph Barton
Sender(s)
BR
Date
1913/11/09
Full date (Estimate)
1913/11/09
Form of letter
ALS(X)
Pieces
2
BR's address code (if sender)
TC
Transcription

BR TO RALPH BARTON PERRY, 9 NOV. 1913
BRACERS 54129. ALS. Harvard U.
Proofread by K. Blackwell


Trin. Coll.1
9 Nov. ’13

Dear Professor Perry

I enclose a syllabus2 of my lectures on theory of knowledge. I don’t know whether you wished for something fuller. As for reading, I haven’t the least idea how much I ought to have put down — if the enclosed list is too long or too short, or in any other way unsuitable, please treat it merely as suggestions. In my lectures, B will be shorter than it should be, because I can’t arrive at satisfactory views on the subjects concerned; on the other hand, I shall have a lot to say about physics of sense-data and realism.

Would it suit you to discuss pragmatism and idealism before I come? Also if you would point out the weak spots in my armour, it might make things more interesting when I come. The Monist has delayed: a preliminary article will appear in January, but the one on “neutral monism”3 (i.e. James and you) will not appear till April.

As regards logic, I gather from Wiener that I can give symbolic stuff in moderation without any harm. I should propose, however, to give a good deal of stuff that would be new. There is a lot of fundamental philosophical stuff that I should like to make clear — it bears on the theory of descriptions and classes, which I think important. I should like to begin in some such way as this:

Names.
Predicates, Relations-in-intension. Indefinables in general.
Propositions and Facts: in a logically correct symbolism, the symbol for what is complex should contain the symbols for its components.
Propositional Functions.
Truth-functions: negation, disjunction, etc.
Descriptions.
Classes, Relations-in-extension.
Types: all except the first are fictions.

This will give the philosophy involved in Principia Mathematica, tho’ not as it is given there.

I hope those who read German in the logic class will read Freg’s Grundlagen and the introduction to his Grundgesetze. There is nothing else in any language, so far as I know, that is any good on philosophical logic. If Dr. Costello could teach the elements of the symbolism in Principia Matha., down to ∗21, or part of the way, it would save time.

Yours faithfully
Bertrand Russell.

  • 1

    [document] Proofread against a photocopy of the original letter.

  • 2

    syllabus Only the outline for Part II of the Theory of Knowledge lectures survives and is presumed to be part of the syllabus. It is Appendix A.7 of Papers 7.

  • 3

    “neutral monism” Also published as Pt. I, Chap. II of Papers 7.

Permission
Everyone
Transcription Public Access
Yes
Record no.
54129
Record created
Dec 13, 1993
Record last modified
Jun 11, 2026
Created/last modified by
duncana