The Philosophy Book

(nextflipdebug2) #1

238 BERTRAND RUSSELL


Immense harm
is caused by
the belief that
work is virtuous.
Bertrand Russell

this perceived virtue rather than
for what they produce. And given
that we consider work itself to be
inherently virtuous, we tend to see
the unemployed as lacking in virtue.
The more we think about it, the
more it seems that our attitudes
toward work are both complex and
incoherent. What, then, can be
done? Russell’s suggestion is that
we look at work not in terms of
these curious moral ideas that
are a relic of earlier times, but in
terms of what makes for a full and
satisfying human life. And when
we do this, Russell believes, it is
hard to avoid the conclusion that
we should all simply work less.
What, Russell asks, if the working
day were only four hours long? Our
present system is such that part of
the population can be overworked,
and so miserable, while another
part can be totally unemployed,
and so also miserable. This, it
seems, does not benefit anyone.

The importance of play
Russell’s view is that reducing our
working hours would free us to
pursue more creative interests.
“Moving matter about,” Russell
writes, “is emphatically not one of

the ends of human life.” If we allow
work to occupy every waking hour,
we are not living fully. Russell
believes that leisure, previously
something known only to the
privileged few, is necessary for a
rich and meaningful life. It might
be objected that nobody would
know what to do with their time
if they worked only for four hours
a day, but Russell regrets this.
If this is true, he says, “it is a
condemnation of our civilization,”
suggesting that our capacity for
play and light-heartedness has been
eclipsed by the cult of efficiency.
A society that took leisure seriously,

Bertrand Russell Bertrand Russell was born in
Wales in 1872 to an aristocratic
family. He had an early interest
in mathematics, and went on to
study the subject at Cambridge.
There he met the philosopher
Alfred North Whitehead, with
whom he later collaborated on the
Principia Mathematica, a book
that established him as one of the
leading philosophers of his era. It
was also at Cambridge that he
met, and deeply influenced, the
philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein.
Russell wanted philosophy to
speak to ordinary people. He was
a social activist, a pacifist, an

educationalist, an advocate of
atheism, and a campaigner
against nuclear arms, as well as
the author of numerous popular
works of philosophy. He died of
influenza in February, 1970.

Key works

1903 The Principles of
Mathematics
1910, 1912, and 1913 (3 vols)
Principia Mathematica
1914 Our Knowledge of the
External World
1927 The Analysis of Matter
1956 Logic and Knowledge

Russell, who are heard extolling
the virtues of “honest toil”, giving
a moral gloss to a system that is
manifestly unjust. And this fact
alone, according to Russell, should
prompt us to re-evaluate the ethics
of work, for by embracing “honest
toil” we comply with and even
promote our own oppression.
Russell’s account of society,
with its emphasis on the struggle
between classes, owes something
to the thought of the 19th-century
philosopher Karl Marx, although
Russell was always uneasy with
Marxism, and his essay is as
critical of Marxist states as it is
of capitalist states. His view also
owes much to Max Weber’s book
The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit
of Capitalism, first published in 1905,
particularly Weber’s examination
of the moral claims that underlie
our attitudes to work—claims that
Russell insists should be challenged.
For example, not only do we see
work as a duty and an obligation,
we also see different types of work
as occupying a hierarchy of virtue.
Manual work is generally considered
less virtuous than more skilled or
intellectual work, and we tend to
reward people in accordance with

Free download pdf