AN EXAMINATION OF BERTRAND RUSSELL’S GENERALIZED STATEMENT: “HITLER IS AN OUTCOME OF ROUSSEAU; ROOSEVELT AND CHURCHILL OF LOCKE

Author: Angela Song 

ABSTRACT

This paper examines Bertrand Russell, a 19th and 20th century British philosopher’s famous saying from his A History of Western Philosophy: “Hitler is an outcome of Rousseau; Roosevelt and Churchill of Locke.” The paper first examines the meaning of outcome, then describes the quote in the context of the book and Russell’s categorization of Enlightenment thinkers into two streams: the romantics and British utilitarians. The paper explores Russell’s bias and oversimplification that comes with his categorization of thinkers, which his bias is then reflected in his quote. Drawing on Ralph Waldo Emerson’s notion of nonconformity, the paper argues that comparison is interpretive and potentially reductive. It challenges Russell’s framing by analyzing the ideological dissonance between Rousseau’s populist social contract and Hitler’s fascist, racist regime, and by contrasting Locke’s liberal ideals with the more socially progressive and economically redistributive policies of Roosevelt and Churchill. Ultimately, it contends that philosophical influence is not deterministic; ideas are provisional and subject to reinterpretation. Thus, labeling political figures as “outcomes” of philosophers neglects the agency, context, and multiplicity of influences that shape historical figures.

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