Simple Compass
02-23-2009, 10:01 AM
I have no respect for Bertrand Russell: his ideas were not at all new yet he was a very arrogant man. All of his ideas, pertaining to mathematics and philosophy, could not have been put forth without Wittgenstein, Whitehead, or Moore, in which Wittgenstein single-handedly created the Analytical school of philosophy and Russell would have to work way more harder to come on par with Wittgenstein. At the same time, Russell enjoyed the fame that far exceeded all of the three, and he had a great penchant showing off how smarter he was than others, with an off-putting pretension and egotism.
The infamous Russell's teapot was an example of such arrogance and intellectual sloppiness: if another philosopher is making that argument, he is entitled to do so, but not Russell: Russell was an advocate of the mathematical rigor of Analytical school, yet the teapot argument has no such rigor and showed no intellectual sophistication. As a learned man he could have better arguments with formal logic yet he chose not to, or, if he was not as intelligent as other people think he was, he might not be able to have any better arguments.
The infamous Russell's teapot was an example of such arrogance and intellectual sloppiness: if another philosopher is making that argument, he is entitled to do so, but not Russell: Russell was an advocate of the mathematical rigor of Analytical school, yet the teapot argument has no such rigor and showed no intellectual sophistication. As a learned man he could have better arguments with formal logic yet he chose not to, or, if he was not as intelligent as other people think he was, he might not be able to have any better arguments.