Listen "Individual and Social Ethics"
Episode Synopsis
The inaugural Reith Lecturer is the philosopher, mathematician, and social reformer Bertrand Russell. One of the founders of analytic philosophy and a Nobel Laureate, he is the author of Principia Mathematica, and the bestselling History of Western Philosophy, written in 1946. His Reith lecture series is entitled 'Authority and the Individual'. In his final lecture, entitled 'Individual and Social Ethics', he relates social and political doctrines to the individual ethics by which people guide their personal lives. He argues that Man needs a sense of personal morality to guide his conduct, and must learn to be critical of tribal customs and beliefs that may be generally accepted amongst his neighbours. Primitive impulses, he says, can find harmless outlets in adventure and creation. He suggests that Man has always been subject to two miseries: firstly, those imposed by external nature which are now largely diminished by science; and secondly, those that men inflict on each other, such as through war. Russell rejects the argument that human nature demands war, believing instead that the greed for possession will lessen as the fear of destitution is removed from society.
More episodes of the podcast The Reith Lectures: Archive 1948-1975
The Birth of Exploration
12/11/1975
On Difference
04/12/1974
Justice Without Bondage
27/11/1974
The Liberal Option
20/11/1974
From Expansion to Improvement
13/11/1974
The Search For A New Order
19/12/1973
The Troubled Giant
28/11/1973
Wanted: An Instrument For Crisis Management
12/12/1972
From Technocracy to Democracy
05/12/1972