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‘Life and work’ outlines the contributions of Bertrand Russell to the technical fields of logic and philosophy as well as describing his private life — his marriages, agnosticism, pacifism, and prison sentences. Russell was born in 1872 to an aristocratic family, but due to the early death of his parents was brought up by his Scottish Presbyterian grandmother. He won a scholarship to Trinity College Cambridge to read mathematics in 1890. Here he met Alfred North Whitehead, with whom he later collaborated in writing Principia Mathematica. He went on to write over 71 books and booklets during his lifetime including The Principles of Mathematics, The Problems of Philosophy, and The Analysis of Mind.
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