This book offers a comprehensive critical survey of issues of historical
interpretation and evaluation in Bertrand Russell's 1918 logical atomism
lectures and logical atomism itself. These lectures record the
culmination of Russell's thought in response to discussions with
Wittgenstein on the nature of judgement and philosophy of logic and with
Moore and other philosophical realists about epistemology and
ontological atomism, and to Whitehead and Russell's novel extension of
revolutionary nineteenth-century work in mathematics and logic.
Russell's logical atomism lectures have had a lasting impact on analytic
philosophy and on Russell's contemporaries including Carnap, Ramsey,
Stebbing, and Wittgenstein. Comprised of 14 original essays, this book
will demonstrate how the direct and indirect influence of these lectures
thus runs deep and wide.