NOS. 1-2, SUMMER/WINTER 1988, PAGES I-IV, 1-248. Antinomies and Paradoxes: Studies in Russell's Early Philosophy. Edited by Ian Winchester and Kenneth Blackwell
Articles
The Tiergarten Programme
Nicholas Griffin
The Antinomy of Dynamical Causation in Leibniz and the Principles and Russell's Early Picture of Physics
Ian Winchester
The Roots of Russell's Paradox
Gregory H. Moore
Bertrand Russell's Essay on the Foundations of Geometry and the Cambridge Mathematical Tradition
Joan Richards
Russell's Logical Manuscripts [abstract]
I. Grattan-Guinness
Russell's Zigzag Path to the Ramified Theory of Types
Alasdair Urquhart
Are Substitutional Quantifiers a Solution to the Problem of the Elimination of Classes in Principia Mathematica?
Jocelyne Couture
The Referential Use of Definite Descriptions
Michel Seymour
Russell's Conception of Philosophy
John G. Slater
Russell's Re-Evaluation of Meinong, 1913-14: an Analysis of Acquaintance
Janet Farrell Smith
Russell's Scientific Realism
Michael Bradie
Russell's Neutral Monism
Robert Tully
The Tenability of Russell's Early Philosophy
A. J. Ayer (moderator), I. Grattan-Guinness, Nicholas Griffin, Robert Tully, and W. V. O. Quine
Contributors
Documents and Textual Studies
Logical Correspondence with Russell
W. V. O. Quine
Editorial
Editor's Notes
Kenneth Blackwell
