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Bertrand Russellbiographical notes
Like many others of his generation who attended Cambridge he was influenced by G.E. Moore and his
Principia Ethica (1903) which propounded the principals of 'the pleasures of human intercourse and the enjoyment of beautiful objects' which inspired many of the Bloomsbury Group.
In 1904 he went to teach at Harvard, where T.S.Eliot became one of his students. Their paths continued to run in close parallel when both became members of the Bloomsbury Group - and closer still when Russell started an affair with Eliot's new wife Vivienne.
Later in life he wrote a series of popular books which were essays and reflections on topics such as liberty, freedom, censorship. Most of his popular writing is humane, stylish, and easy to read. Many modern attitudes we now take for granted - tolerance, liberal humanism, questioning of authority - were first articulated in collections such as
The Conquest of Happiness,
In Praise of Idleness, and
Why I Am Not a Christian.
During the late 1920s and early 1930s, as his marriage to Dora broke down and as he lost faith in Beacon Hill, Russell continued to write books intended to emancipate readers from what he saw as the fetters of outmoded religious belief, restrictive marriages, repressed attitudes towards human sexuality, and authoritarian education practices.
In 1936 he married for the third time to Patricia (Peter) Helen Spence. While teaching in the United States in the late 1930s, Russell was offered a teaching appointment at City College, New York. The appointment was revoked following a large number of public protests and a judicial decision which stated that he was morally unfit to teach at the College.
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