I gave this 5 stars because it is incomparably the best single-volume history of philosophy that I’ve read, surpassing even that of Will Durant and Anthony Gottlieb.
It’s different from other histories of philosophy in three respects. First, it covers more general history than most accounts, which is necessary to really understand the philosophers. Second, Russell doesn’t just present the views of the various philosophers but provides his interpretations and critiques of their various positions. And third, the depth of analysis is far greater than from other authors.
There are three things I admire about Russell. One, as a writer, he packs a lot of meaning in as few words as possible, so while the book is long, a less skillful writer would have doubled the length. He believed in concise writing without the pretentious language.
Second, Russell thought deeply about the topics he wrote about, and was well-educated in mathematics, history, and philosophy. Even when he disagrees with a philosopher, he can present their views just as well as his own; this is something you’ll find lacking in many modern intellectuals.
Third, despite all his education and brilliance, he remained humble and anti-dogmatic. He went wherever his reasoning led him but was famous for saying he would never die for his beliefs because he could be wrong.
I should admit that I find myself agreeing with many of Russell’s ideas, and so maybe my review is a bit biased. As another reviewer mentioned, this is more of an analytic philosophers take on history than a fully objective history of philosophy, because Russell is not afraid to voice his opinion. Still, I think this view is slightly exaggerated because Russell does present the philosophy he disagrees with fully and accurately. He doesn’t set up straw men but he does, I think, successfully refute many of the ideas from Plato, Hegel, Marx, and others.
What I found particularly interesting was that Russell does not have the same reverence for Plato and Aristotle that many authors do. The works of Plato and Aristotle happened to survive, in large part because the mystical elements of each was easy to reconcile with the doctrines of the Catholic Church.
But as you read through the first section on ancient history, you realize Russell may be right: had the writings of Leucippus, Democritus, and Epicurus survived, we may have had the Renaissance, scientific revolution, and Enlightenment happen sooner. These writings of the early atomists are fully consistent with modern science, and had they not been crushed under the influence of Plato and Aristotle, progress may have been realized sooner.
Russell believes, as I do, that there are two kinds of truth in the world, natural/scientific and psychological, and that the history of philosophy is largely the confusing of linguistic concepts taken to represent actually existing entities. All metaphysical entities, such as God, immortality, spirits, etc. are reconfigurations of actual things that exist into things that exist only within the mind. A quick example: unicorns are composed of horses and horns, each of which exist, but do not exist in the particular configuration I give them in my mind. My language can create configurations, but this does not make these configurations real. Likewise, God is simply the logical extension of goodness, knowledge, and love, taken to the extreme and reconfigured as one entity. But as we just saw, you can’t reconfigure things that actually exist into something that does simply by thinking about it.
The purpose of philosophy is, therefore, largely the clarification of concepts and the pursuit of rational ethics. If you don’t agree with this, if you favor continental philosophy, or if you believe that there is some kind of transcendent reality beyond the reach of science and accessible only through subjective experience, then this will not be your favorite book. But I doubt that it wouldn’t be valuable to you, and other than Russell I don’t know who could provide a better account of the analytic perspective.