POLITICAL THEORY OF BERTRAND RUSSELL
V.
V. RAMANA MURTI,
Reader
of Political Science, University of Rajasthan, Jaipur
Earl
Russell is an acknowledged philosopher and his contributions to mathematical
philosophy are acclaimed as unique. It is, however, doubtful, if the same is
equally true of Bertrand Russell’s role as a political thinker. The political
and social theories of Russell are notable for their immediate concern for the
predicament of mankind in our times. But the intellectual fervour that is
characteristic of Lord Russell’s philosophy is also manifest in his
encyclopaedic writings on the perennial questions of political theory.
Politics
is very much in his line. Bertrand Russell’s grandfather, Lord John Russell was
twice Prime Minister of England. In an essay on Lord John Russell, Bertrand
Russell remarks that “His greatest achievement was the carrying of the Reform
Bill in 1832, which started Britain on the course that led to complete
democracy.” l Bertrand Russell’s father, Viscount Amberly was an
ardent liberal and came under the influence of that “Saint of Rationalism”,
John Stuart Mill. The Russells have been conspicuous as Whigs for generations.
Their ancestors played an important part in the Glorious Revolution of 1688.
One of their famous heros, William Lord Russell was executed for his resistance
to Charles II2. The duty of public service, even if it meant an
unpopular course, is inherited by Bertrand Russell from more than one source.
Russell’s
interest in public life began early in his life when, as a young man of great
intellectual distinction, he was working on his unique work Principia
Mathematica from 1903 to 1910. At this time, questions of Free Trade and
Woman’s Suffrage were being discussed by the Conservatives and Liberals.
Political life in England was in a ferment. Russell had been brought up as a
liberal, and his sympathies were unmistakably on the side of the liberal
cause. In pursuit of his conviction, he even decided to enter Parliament.
Bertrand Russell has offered candidature three times for the House of Commons.
In 1907, Russell stood for Parliament as a Liberal candidate. Again, in the
General Elections of 1922 and 1923, at Chelsea, he stood for Parliament as
Labour candidates. In all the cases, Russell has been defeated. Though he has
conducted his election campaigns with scrupulous regard to his principles and
views, his failure to go to the Parliament is perhaps not unexpected. As Sir
Charles Trevelyan, a close friend of Bertrand Russell, remarked, “Russell, was far
too uncompromising to be a success as a politician”.
What
is the loss in practical politics turns out to be the gain for political
theory. For a philosopher like Bertrand Russell, there is a more significant
role in the realm of ideas. The service of thought is a more exacting duty
which demands from the thinker exceptional qualities of courage and integrity.
Both of them are exemplified to an eminent degree in the life-work of Lord
Russell. His writings are as voluminous as the causes he champions are
extensive. The contemporary scene is a witness to their profound influence, the
value of which is never in dispute. In the long and varied career of Bertrand
Russell, at least three phases are noticeable.
In
the first phase, Russell continues the liberalism of J. S. Mill when it is
subjected to a crucial test. During the World War I and its aftermath the
freedom of the citizen was threatened by the encroaching demands of the State.
The political and economic crisis that eventually became unavoidable greatly
diminished the initiative of the individual and the group. Bertrand Russell has
an abiding concern for the liberty of the individual. When the increasing power
of the State tends to restrict the autonomy of the individual’s life, Russell
questions the very basis of State-action. The Supreme power of the State is
never more manifest than in the instance of war. The experience of World War I
proved this…..beyond any doubt. Writing in 1915 on the State, Bertrand Russell
remarks:
“The
evil wrought in the modern world by the excessive power of the State is very
great, and very little recognized….The chief
harm wrought by the State is promotion of efficiency in war….The present system
is irrational..Apart from war, the modern great state is harmful from its
vastness and the resulting sense of individual helplessness.”
4
This
fatal tendency, unless it is effectively resisted by groups and persons, soon
results in the total absence of individuality. When increasing numbers of the
citizens disown the impulse to assert their own ideas and judgments on various
problems of human life, the very habit of free thought and discussion may be
severely curtailed. That this can very nearly happen has been recently
demonstrated by the overorganized governments of the totalitarian states. The
purpose of any worthwhile political organization must, therefore, be directed
to preserve and cherish the infinite value of the individual. If society cannot
sustain this for one reason or another, Russell argues, “human beings cease to
be individual and they become machine made”. 5
Like John Dewey, who was deeply concerned with the ‘lost’ individual and his
‘recovery’ in his theme on individuality, Bertrand Russell vigorously pleads
for a continuous search for individuality. In a book on political ideals,
written in 1917, Bertrand Russell says: “In a human being, provided he has not
been crushed by the economic or governmental machine, there is...individuality,
a something distinctive without which no man or woman can...retain the full
dignity which is native to human beings….To preserve and strengthen the impulse
that makes for individuality should be the foremost object of all political
institutions”. 6
The
sovereign importance of the individual is cardinal to Bertrand Russell’s political
philosophy. He repeatedly shows how the great advances of society are very
largely due to the creative initiative of the few exceptionally endowed
individuals. It is their genius for innovation that has greatly enriched the
communities in such significant aspects of life as art, literature, philosophy,
religion and science. It is by the cultivation of the individual that the
principle of growth is ensured. In his book Roads to Freedom, first published
in 1918, Russell maintains: “A good community does not spring from the glory of
the State, but from the unfettered development of the individuals...from
congenial work giving opportunity for whatever constructiveness each man or
woman may possess, from free personal relations embodying love and taking away
the roots of envy….and above all from the joy of life and its expression in the
spontaneous creations of art and science. It is these things that make an age
or a nation worthy of existence, and these things are not to be secured by
bowing down before the State. It is the individual in whom all that is good
must be realized, and the free growth of the individual must be the supreme and
of a political system which is to refashion the world.” 7
The
problem of the individual’s relationship to the political authority is a
recurring question in the versatile writings of Russell. It has been revived in
more than one source by him. When Earl Russell has been invited to
deliver the first B. B. C. Reith Lecture 8 in 1948, he has devoted
the whole series to a timely discussion of this topic. These lectures, which
have been subsequently published under the title Authority and Individual, revive
the ancient issue in the new context of a Welfare State. The numerous
difficulties of reconciling private initiative with public order are all
analysed by Russell with his characteristic insight into the problem. He does
not minimize the overwhelming need for “social cohesion”. 8 Even
here, Russell is predominantly preoccupied with the defence of the liberty of
the individual against authority. His view of a World Government is necessarily
limited to the essential functions of eliminating war. He recommends that
national governments will do well by delegating as many powers as possible to
regional authorities. The residual powers are vested by Bertrand Russell in the
individual.
Russell’s
interest in the individual is not confined to his theoretical work alone. His
deep sympathies with this cause are extended to its defence under trying
circumstances and constant formulation of the means for its implementation. As
a rule, Russell’s choice for championing the individual freedom is limited to
the traditional methods of education and propaganda within the framework or the
law. Bertrand Russell says: “I am a British Whig, with a British
love of compromise and moderation.” 9
His acceptance of the constitutional means is not unqualified. In a situation
involving a total crisis, the conventional method of constitutional activity
may be completely ineffective. The new challenge may demand a method beyond
constitutional politics.
The
World War I constituted such a confrontation to the conscience of man. The
cherished values of the dignity of human life and freedom of thought were
suddenly disregarded and violated. As a pacifist, for supporting conscientious
objection during the war, Bertrand Russell was “sentenced to six months’
imprisonment” at Brixton Prison in May 1918.10
With courting arrest for the cause of individual liberty in the war-time,
Russell’s approval of a method of direct action to promote the supremely valid
right of conscience under most trying circumstances becomes obvious. A few
others of Russell’s contemporaries are also conspicuous for their love of
liberty and the freedom of the individual. They are, however, rarely known to
justify a technique of direct action for the realization of political and
social objectives. Prof. H. J. Laski shared Bertrand Russell’s passion (at
least at the time of World War I) for individual liberty. But even a
consideration of such a mode of action was hardly in evidence in the prolific
writings of Laski. Though the classical scholar of Cambridge, Sir Ernest Barker
enunciated the arresting theme of the Discredited State (1915), his
pluralistic conclusions had little bearing on the possibility of non-violent
direct action. It is clearly the distinction of Bertrand Russell to have
justified the use of the non-violent means; and to have exemplified in action
what he has justified in theory is a far greater service that Russell has done
to the world.
For this reason Russell’s
individualism coexists with anarchism. It is a kind of anarchism that is
advocated by Kropotkin rather than Bakunin. Indeed, in the admirable survey of
political theories of Freedom, Russell has undertaken a detailed examination of
the constructive proposals of Kropotkin for organizing society on the
anarchist principles. 11 His appraisal
is sympathetic and convincing. Russell sees no reason in force and violence as
methods for bringing about a radical transformation of the State. While he
hopes to explore the usefulness of education and persuasion for this purpose,
he does not rule out the employment of direct action under certain
circumstances. The note of a philosophic anarchism is obvious in the writings
of Bertrand Russell though he has sometimes stated to the contrary.
12 This dominant theme is significantly reviewed
by Russell in the recent phase of his life when he is profoundly concerned for
the survival of mankind in the event of a nuclear war.
In
the second phase, Russell turns to the social problem. He visited Soviet Russia
in 1920 and met Lenin and Trotsky among other notables in the Bolshevik
hierarchy. His account of communism in Russia is sharply critical. Russell does
not discount the importance of the Russian Revolution of 1917. Its impact on
the political, social and economic questions of the current social order is
inescapable. It can be neither exaggerated nor under-estimated. The communist
experiment has to be assessed judiciously with a view to determining its faults
and achievements. Russell reviews the conditions of U. S. S. R. in the light of
the communistic theory. He concludes the course of his study of the Soviet
system in 1920 thus:
“Bolshevism
is internally aristocratic and externally militant. The communists...are
practically the sole possessors of power...The communist theory of
international revolution is exceedingly simple. The revolution foretold by
Marx...happened to begin in Russia. In countries where the revolution has not yet
broken out, the sole duty of a communist is to hasten its advent….No real good
can come to any country without a bloody revolution….For my part, after
weighing this theory carefully…..I find myself definitely and strongly opposed
to it.” 12
This
categorical observation Russell made in 1920 with regard to communism is of
much historical interest. Russell has never subscribed to communism as such. He
is more sympathetic to guild socialism. His own choice has been stated as
“democratic socialism”.14
Russell’s strictures of capitalism are never made in the Marxian vein. If he
advocates democratic socialism, it is because he finds in it an alternative to
the totalitarian communism of Karl Marx. Russell’s objection to communism is
uncompromising. He writes on this question: “My objection is not that
capitalism is less bad than the Bolsheviks believe, but that Socialism is less
good, not its best form, but in the only form which is likely to be brought
about by war….In the course of a desperate struggle, the heritage of
civilization is likely to be lost, while hatred, suspicion, and cruelty become
normal in the relations of human beings….for these reasons chiefly, I cannot
support any movement which aims at world revolution”
15 In the light of this unequivocal verdict
against communism and revolution by Bertrand Russell, it is un-understandable
how the common notion that Russell is a communist has gained wide currency in
the world.
Bertrand
Russell’s The Practice and Theory of Bolshevism has been an influential document
in many ways. It is as much an indictment of the Marxian system as it is a
reminder to the socialist movement in England. Russell had begun a searching
criticism of Marxism when he had visited Berlin in 1895 for the purpose of
studying Marxian communism. His accounts of German socialism to the Fabian
Society and the London School of Economics and Political Science have pointed
out the basic implications of communism. In his book German Social Democracy
published in 1896, Bertrand Russell formulated a critical evaluation of
Marxism. 16 This has been
elaborared and strengthened by Russell in the book on Bolshevism he published
subsequently.
While
analysing the Soviet system, Russell has also drawn pertinent lessons for the
working class movement in Great Britain. The pitfalls of Soviet communism need
greater scrutiny by the English socialists as it is precisely those mistakes
that they have to avoid in England. Russell has no illusions about the reality
of the dictatorship in U. S. S. R., and his comments on the Czarist character
of the Soviet totalitarianism have constituted a timely warning to the Labour
Party and the socialist movement in England. Bertrand Russell’s enquiry into
Bolshevism has now acquired an empirical validity that cannot be refuted.
Russell
undertook in 1934 an extensive analysis of the forces of a significant century
in his book Freedom and Organization 1814-1914. They include the
historical, economic, social and philosophical movements that influenced the
course of events during this period in Europe, England and America. All the
tenets of Marxism are reconsidered in the context of its origins and effects.
The role of the philosophical radicals in the nineteenth century, which is
often overlooked, is examined by Russell at great length. The dilemma of this
period is reviewed by Russell when he observes towards the end of his book:
“Organization to the utmost within the State, freedom without limit in the
relations between states. Since organization increases the power of the states,
and their external power is exerted by war or the threat of war, increase of
merely national organization can only increase disaster when war occurs.”
17
A
more significant contribution is made by Russell to the social sciences when he
made in 1938 a pioneering study of Power. He calls it A New Social
Analysis, and proves that power is “the fundamental concept in social
science.”18 Here ‘power’ is
examined in the wider framework of social life, its diverse sources are
determined and its many forms are discussed. Russell is one of the few
distinguished philosophers in our times to have attempted a comprehensive
enquiry into the elements of power. The enormous impact of psychology on the
development of power is restated by him with particular insight. Ho defines
power, “as the production of “intended efforts” of a quantitative manner.
19 After discussing the several levels of power
and their impact on political, economic and social changes in society, Russell
deals with a greater problem of power as he examines its possible limitations.
Excess of power is objectionable in itself. The impact of morality on power is
a significant aspect which he elaborates in great detail. The last chapter of
the book is devoted to “The Taming of Power.” Russell treats this topic as it
appears under various political conditions, economic circumstances, propaganda
techniques, psychological situations and educational systems. He writes:
“From
the point of view of the taming of power, very difficult questions arise as to
the best size of a governmental unit. In a great modern state, even it is a
democracy, the ordinary citizen has very little sense of power; he does not
decide what are to be the issues in an election….Where democracy exists, there
is still need to safeguard individuals and minorities against tyranny, both
because tyranny is undesirable in itself, and because it is likely to lead to
breaches of order…..The eighteenth and nineteenth century methods of preventing
arbitrary power no longer suit our circumstances, and such new methods as exist
are not very effective”. 20
Russell
has also initiated a social framework of reference for reconstructing a history
of western philosophy. It is a significant approach as it tries to relate the
philosophical movements to the political and social conditions of their times.
To the title of his book A History of Western Philosophy, Bertrand
Russell has given a subtitle “Its connection with political and social
circumstances from the earliest times to the present day”. He writes in the
“Preface”: “My purpose is to exhibit philosophy as an integral part of social
and political life not as the isolated speculations of remarkable individuals,
but as both an effect and a cause of the various communities in which different
systems, flourished.” 21 This is a
major achievement of Bertrand Russell. It is now an acknowledged masterpiece in
the literature on the subject.
The work on western
philosophy was undertaken during the war period by Bertrand Russell when he was
engaged on a lecture assignment in America. He had given his support to the
World War II. Critics of Russell have often pointed out his approval of World
War II in contrast to his opposition to World War I. But
Russell has repeatedly said that he has “never been a theoretical pacifist”,
who is opposed to any war at any time on grounds of absolute conviction. He has
always maintained that some wars are just, while others are not. The
inconsistency in Russell’s views is only seeming, and not real. Even this is
seen to lapse with the advent of the atomic age in 1945.
The
life-mission of Bertrand Russell culminates now in the third phase, which still
continues. The inhuman and unparalleled destruction that the atom bombs have
caused over the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki has moved him as nothing else
in the recent history of the world. Russell has begun to be profoundly
disturbed as he is closely watching the rapid advancement of the atomic
weapons. In the manufacture of the hydrogen bomb, humanity
is confronted with a weapon of the utmost possible devastation. The nuclear war
has completely changed the character of war as such.
In
the light of this new phenomenon, the East-West conflict in the post-war period
has very grave consequences. The competitive arms race between the U. S. A. and
the U. S. S. R. has become a vicarious process, involving mutual distrust
between them. It has diminished all chances of agreement between the two blocs
over basic issues in international relations. While the very nature of a thermo
nuclear war and the risks of total annihilation of the world make a global war
unrealistic, the Big Powers are not prepared to modify their national policies
in favour of co-existence and peace. Writing in 1936 on the “Nature of the Next
War”, Bertrand Russell remarked:
“Twenty
or thirty years hence the technique of war may have made sufficient progress to
put an end to American immunity and the partial immunity of the U. S. S. R.,
but as yet that point has not been reached”. 22
But
the world has reached that point sooner than is expected. And Russell’s words
have proved prophetic.
The
perils of a nuclear war are constantly stressed by Russell in
order to convince mankind that war is no longer tenable and peace
is inevitable. He has made this his singular theme in the numerous appeals,
messages, speeches and writings he has undertaken since the end of World War
II. It is due to his courageous lead that the pacifist movement in England has
been able to build vigorous organizations like the campaign for Nuclear Disarmament
and the Committee of 100. U Thant, the Secretaty-General of the United Nations
observed recently: “Lord Russell was one of the first to perceive the folly and
danger of unlimited accumulation of nuclear armaments. In the early years he
conducted practically a one-man crusade against this tendency”. 23
It
is in his dedicated quest for an adequate method of political action to pursue
the cause of peace that Russell has made revolutionary departure from the
conventional and traditional means of political change. He has realized that
mere constitutional action is not enough. That he has come to this conclusion
even in a country like England, where the rule of law is deeply rooted is
significant. Russell has been inevitably led to the choice of a Gandhian
technique of non-violent resistance as the most suitable method against the
peril of a nuclear war. Having expressed his conviction on this subject,
Russell has not hesitated to practise what he has professed. He has himself
courted imprisonment on 12th September, 1961 for committing the offence of
civil disobedience. Russell has observed, in the statement he made at Bow
Street in the court, that “It was only step by step that we were driven to
non-violent civil disobedience”, He added:
“It
has seemed to some of us that, in a country supposed to be a democracy, the
public should know the probable consequence of present great
power policies in East and West... We feel it a profound and inescapable duty
to make the facts known...Non-violent civil disobedience was forced upon us by
the fact that it was more fully reported than other methods of making the facts
known….We believe that this is the most effective way of working for the
salvation of our country and the world...”
The
acceptance of non-violent direct action by Lord Russell at the present
circumstances is of momentous significance. In the past, Russell kept a
judicious silence over the validity of the Gandhian method of non-violent
non-cooperation. He has been, at times, very critical of the pursuit of this
very means by the nationalist movement in India. Keeping in view these
reservations of Russell towards the Gandhian civil resistance, his
justification now of the non-violent techniques for promoting peace is most
remarkable. It is the logic of the nuclear age that has forced Lord Russell to
explore the Gandhian technique. He has explained the case for civil resistance
in a speech on 15th April, 1961 in Birmingham:
“...non-violent
civil disobedience is justified when the law demands the individual concerned
to do something which he considers wicked. This is the case of conscientious
objectors. But our case is a somewhat different one. We advocate and practise
non-violent civil disobedience as a method of causing people to know the perils
to which the world is exposed and in persuading them to join us in opposing the
insanity which affects, at present, many of the most powerful governments in
the world. I will concede that civil disobedience as a method of propaganda is
difficult to justify except in extreme cases, but I cannot imagine any issue
more extreme or more overwhelmingly important than that of the prevention of
nuclear war.” 24
With
the possession of nuclear weapons, the world is only perfecting ‘The Doomsday
Machine’. 25 It is man’s very
survival that is at stake. Russell’s advocacy of the Gandhian civil resistance
revives the constructive anarchism he has upheld earlier during World War I.
Gandhian political theory is also derived from the several sources of
philosophic anarchism. The political theory of Lord Russell achieves an
integration between anarchism and pacifism.
One
of the remarkable expressions of Russell’s anarchist pacifism is to be
found in his unremitting concern for the voice of ‘dissent’ in contemporary
society. Wherever the individual is threatened by a coercive government and the
note of dissent is curbed by its authoritarian demands, Russell has always
championed the case of the protestant. Bertrand Russell’s quest for peace is
reinforced by his dedication for individual liberty. Announcing the
establishment of Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation on September 29, 1963, Lord
Russell remarked:
“Man
faces two supreme menaces to his existence. The world is racked with hatred.
Wherever one looks, fatricidal violence is rampant. Cruelty is pervasive. I am,
at the moment, actively appealing on behalf of political prisoners, many of
them suffering torture, in 23 countries: East, West and neutral. Elementary
human problems, such as the reunion of families, seem to be beyond the
capability of governments. There is little time to learn elementary lessons of
decency and toleration...Throughout my life, and especially since 1914, I have
witnessed an increase in the unbounded cruelty of authority. One is driven
almost to despair by the growth of intolerance...one is faced with the menace
of authoritarianism and the manner in which it contributes to the danger of
extinction for our species.”
It
is for this foremost purpose that Lora Russell has tried his utmost to halt the
growing conflict wherever and whenever it has appeared in the world. His innate
humanism has made him a symbol of all right causes today. He passionately
pleads for co-existence. The role of the neutrals in the world politics is
defended by him. His meaningful support to the concept of non-alignment has
increased its value. He recognizes the great value of the small states in the
framework of international relations at present and he urges their increasing
participation in the resolution of all conflicts and tensions. He has appealed
for world peace and the survival of homo sapiens during the Cuban crisis
in 1963, and his mission is directed to both the parties in the conflict. When
the Sino-Indian border dispute grew into an armed conflict, Russell directed
his ceaseless efforts to Communist China and India as well for immediate
suspension of war in the larger global interests. He has actively intervened in
the Arab-Israel dispute, the division of Germany, the problem of Congo, the
crisis in Viet Nam, the struggle in Cyprus, the racial discrimination in South
Africa, the disabilities of Negroes in America, the ordeal of the Jews in
Soviet Russia and many other fatal questions involving the peace of the world
and the freedom of the individual. In our nuclear age, Bertrand Russell
represents the conscicnce of mankind.
l
Bertrand Russell, Portraits from Memory and other Essays. p. 117.
2
Alan Wood, Bertrand Russell, The Passionate Sceptic. p. 18.
3 Alan
Wood, Bertrand Russell, The Passionate Sceptic. Pp. 71–73 and 141-142.
4 Bertrand
Russell, Principles of Social Reconstruction (George Allen and Unwin),
1954. Pp. 43-44.
5 cf.
John Dewey, Individualism Old and New. (George Allen and Unwin)
1931. Chapter V.
6 Bertrand
Russell, Political Ideas (George Allen and Unwin), 1963. Pp.
70-71.
7 Bertrand
Russell, Roads to Freedom (George Allen and Unwin), 1949, p. 145.
8 Bertrand
Russell, Authority and Individual. Pp. 25-36 and 54-66.
9 Bertrand
Russell, Sceptical Essays. p. 9.
10 Alan
Wood, op. cit. Pp. 112-116.
11 Bertrand
Russell, op. cit. Pp. 64-66 and 100-104.
12 cf.
Paul Arthur Schilpp (Ed.), The Philosophy of Bertrand Russell. p. 18.
(“My Mental Development” by Bertrand Russell), Tudor Publishing Company, New
York, 1951.
13 Bertrand
Russell, The Practice and the Theory of Bolshevism (George Allen and
Unwin), 1920. Pp. 23-24.
14 In
his latest book (1963), Unarmed Victory (Pp. 12-13) Bertrand Russell
writes conducively: “I do not like communism beause it is undemocratic. I wrote
a very hostile criticism of it after a visit to Russia in 1920, and the
expectations which I then expressed were fulfilled in the time of Stalin. Both
before and after this time, in 1896 and 1934, I wrote very hostile criticisms
of Marx and I see no reason to recant what I then said…For my part, I am a
believer in democratic socialism. I dislike communism because it is
undemocratic, and capitalism because it favours exploitation”.
15 Bertrand
Russell, The Practice and Theory of Bolshevism. Pp. 24-25.
16 Bertrand
Russell, German Social Democracy (Longmans, Green & Company)
1906, Chapters I and II.
17 Bertrand
Russell, Freedom and Organization. p. 450.
18 Bertrand
Russell, Power (George Allen and Unwin), 1960. p. 9,
19
Ibid. p. 25. Also see Bertrand Russell, Human Society in Ethics and
Politics, Part II, Chapter II.
20 Op.
cit. Pp. 188-191.
21 Bertrand
Russell, A History of Western Philosophy (George Allen and
Unwin); 1945. p. ix.
22 Bertrand
Russell, Which Way to Peace? (Michael Joseph Ltd.), 1936. p. 48.
23 It
is a part of the message that U Thant gave on the occasion of the opening of
the Bertrand Russell Peace Foundation in London on September 29, 1963.
24 cf.
Arthur and Lila Weinberk (Eds.), Instead of Violence (Beacon
Press, Boston), 1963. p. 51.
25 Bertrand-Russell,
Has Man A Future? (George Allen anti Unwin) 1961. p. 36.