Walter W. Marseille: Difference between revisions

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Marseille was the recipient of a well-known letter dated 5 May 1948 in which Bertrand Russell signalled his agreement with the paper. Russell's letter, of which Einstein may have been the first to have been sent a copy, was first published by Marseille in ''The Nation'', 16 Oct. 1954, when he disagreed with Russell's changed views on nuclear disarmament. The letter and its lack of context have been of concern to Russell scholars.<ref>The letter may be read in R.W. Clark, ''The Life of Bertrand Russell'', pp.&nbsp;523–4; Russell, ''Selected Letters'' (ed. N. Griffin), vol. 2, pp.&nbsp;428–9; ''Yours Faithfully, Bertrand Russell'' (ed. R. Perkins), pp.&nbsp;204–5; ''Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell'', vol. 28 (ed. A. Bone), p.&nbsp;72; and it is discussed in Ray Monk's biography of Russell, vol. 2, pp.&nbsp;299–303. Sidney Hook quoted the entire letter in his reply to [[M.S. Arnoni]], "Arnoni vs. Hook", ''The New Leader'', 23 Oct. 1967, pp.&nbsp;34–5.</ref>
 
By 1954 Marseilles was a Berkeley, California psychoanalyst. That year he contributed a series of radio programmes broadcasts attempting a psychoanalytic study of [[Karl Marx]]. He published occasionally on [[nuclear weapons]] policy in the ''[[Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists]]'', from 1954 until 1962.
 
==Works==