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Isaiah Berlin

Sir Isaiah Berlin OM CBE FBA (24 May/6 June 1909[4] – 5 November 1997) was a Russian-British social and political theorist, philosopher, and historian of ideas.[5] Although he became increasingly averse to writing for publication, his improvised lectures and talks were sometimes recorded and transcribed, and many of his spoken words were converted into published essays and books, both by himself and by others, especially his principal editor from 1974, Henry Hardy.


Isaiah Berlin

Berlin in 1983
Born(1909-06-06)6 June 1909
Died5 November 1997(1997-11-05) (aged 88)
Oxford, England, United Kingdom
Alma materCorpus Christi College, Oxford
Spouse
Aline de Gunzbourg
(m. 1956)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
Institutions
Doctoral students
Other notable students
Main interests
Notable ideas

Born in Riga (now the capital of Latvia, then a part of the Russian Empire) in 1909, he moved to Petrograd, Russia, at the age of six, where he witnessed the revolutions of 1917. In 1921 his family moved to the UK, and he was educated at St Paul's School, London, and Corpus Christi College, Oxford.[6] In 1932, at the age of twenty-three, Berlin was elected to a prize fellowship at All Souls College, Oxford. In addition to his own prolific output, he translated works by Ivan Turgenev from Russian into English and, during World War II, worked for the British Diplomatic Service. From 1957 to 1967 he was Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory at the University of Oxford. He was president of the Aristotelian Society from 1963 to 1964. In 1966, he played a critical role in creating Wolfson College, Oxford, and became its founding President. Berlin was appointed a CBE in 1946, knighted in 1957, and appointed to the Order of Merit in 1971. He was President of the British Academy from 1974 to 1978. He also received the 1979 Jerusalem Prize for his lifelong defence of civil liberties, and on 25 November 1994 he received the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws at the University of Toronto, for which occasion he prepared a "short credo" (as he called it in a letter to a friend), now known as "A Message to the Twenty-First Century", to be read on his behalf at the ceremony.[7]

An annual Isaiah Berlin Lecture is held at the Hampstead Synagogue, at Wolfson College, Oxford, at the British Academy, and in Riga. Berlin's work on liberal theory and on value pluralism, as well as his opposition to Marxism and communism, has had a lasting influence.

Early life edit

 
Plaque marking what was once Berlin's childhood home (designed by Mikhail Eisenstein) in Riga, engraved in Latvian, English, and Hebrew with the tribute "The British philosopher Sir Isaiah Berlin lived in this house 1909–1915"
 
The Angliyskaya Embankment in Saint Petersburg, where Berlin lived as a child during the Russian Revolutions

Berlin was born on 6 June 1909 into a wealthy Jewish family, the only son of Mendel Berlin, a timber trader (and a direct descendant of Shneur Zalman, founder of Chabad Hasidism), and his wife Marie, née Volshonok.[8][9] His family owned a timber company, one of the largest in the Baltics,[10] as well as forests in Russia,[9] from where the timber was floated down the Daugava river to its sawmills in Riga. As his father, who was the head of the Riga Association of Timber Merchants,[10] worked for the company in its dealings with Western companies, he was fluent not only in Yiddish, Russian, and German, but also in French and English. His Russian-speaking mother, Marie (Musya) Volshonok,[11] was also fluent in Yiddish and Latvian.[12] Isaiah Berlin spent his first six years in Riga and later lived in Andreapol (a small timber town near Pskov, effectively owned by the family business)[13] and Petrograd (now St Petersburg). In Petrograd, the family lived first on Vasilevsky Island and then on Angliiskii Prospekt on the mainland. On Angliiskii Prospekt, they shared their building with other tenants, including Rimsky-Korsakov's daughter, an assistant Minister of Finnish affairs, and Princess Emeretinsky. With the onset of the October Revolution of 1917, the fortunes of the building's tenants were rapidly reversed, with both the Princess Emeretinsky and Rimsky-Korsakov's daughter soon being made to stoke the building's stoves and sweep the yards.[14] Berlin witnessed the February and October Revolutions both from his apartment windows and from walks in the city with his governess, where he recalled the crowds of protesters marching on the Winter Palace Square.[15]

One particular childhood memory of the February Revolution marked his lifelong opposition to violence, with Berlin saying:

Well I was seven and a half and something, and then I was – did I tell you the terrible sight of the policeman being dragged – not policeman, a sharp shooter from the rooftop – being dragged away by a lynching bee […] In the early parts of the revolution, the only people who remained loyal to the Tsar was the police, the Pharaon, I've never seen [the term] Pharaon in the histories of the Russian Revolution. They existed, and they did sniping from the rooftops or attics. I saw a man like that, a Pharaon […]. That's not in the books, but it is true. And they sniped at the revolutionaries from roofs or attics and things. And this man was dragged down, obviously, by a crowd, and was being obviously taken to a not very agreeable fate, and I saw this man struggling in the middle of a crowd of about twenty […] [T]hat gave me a permanent horror of violence which has remained with me for the rest of my life.[16]

 
English Heritage blue plaque at 33 Upper Addison Gardens, Holland Park, London

Feeling increasingly oppressed by life under Bolshevik rule, which identified the family as bourgeoisie, the family left Petrograd, on 5 October 1920, for Riga, but encounters with anti-Semitism and difficulties with the Latvian authorities convinced them to leave, and they moved to Britain in early 1921 (Mendel in January, Isaiah and Marie at the beginning of February), when Berlin was eleven.[17] In London, the family first stayed in Surbiton where he was sent to Arundel House for preparatory school, then within the year they bought a house in Kensington and six years later in Hampstead.

Berlin's native language was Russian, and his English was virtually nonexistent at first, but he reached proficiency in English within a year at around the age of 12.[18] In addition to Russian and English, Berlin was fluent in French, German, and Italian, and he knew Hebrew, Latin, and Ancient Greek. Despite his fluency in English, however, in later life Berlin's Oxford English accent would sound increasingly Russian in its vowel sounds.[19] Whenever he was described as an English philosopher, Berlin always insisted that he was not an English philosopher, but would forever be a Russian Jew: "I am a Russian Jew from Riga, and all my years in England cannot change this. I love England, I have been well treated here, and I cherish many things about English life, but I am a Russian Jew; that is how I was born and that is who I will be to the end of my life."[20][21]

Education edit

Berlin was educated at St Paul's School in London. According to Michael Bonavia, a British author (and son of Ferruccio Bonavia) who was at school with him, he

made astonishing feats in the school's Junior Debating Society and the School Union Society. The rapid, even flow of his ideas, the succession of confident references to authors whom most of his contemporaries had never heard, left them mildly stupefied. Yet there was no backlash, no resentment at these breathless marathons, because Berlin's essential modesty and good manners eliminated jealousy and disarmed hostility.[22]

After leaving St Paul's, Berlin applied to Balliol College, Oxford, but was denied admission after a chaotic interview. Berlin decided to apply again, only to a different college: Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Berlin was admitted and commenced his literae humaniores degree. He graduated in 1928, taking first-class honours in his final examinations and winning the John Locke Prize for his performance in the philosophy papers, in which he outscored A. J. Ayer.[23] He subsequently took another degree at Oxford in philosophy, politics and economics, again taking first-class honours after less than a year on the course. He was appointed a tutor in philosophy at New College, Oxford,[citation needed] and soon afterwards was elected to a prize fellowship at All Souls College, Oxford, the first unconverted Jew to achieve this fellowship at All Souls.[24]

While still a student, he befriended Ayer (with whom he was to share a lifelong amicable rivalry), Stuart Hampshire, Richard Wollheim, Maurice Bowra, Roy Beddington, Stephen Spender, Inez Pearn, J. L. Austin and Nicolas Nabokov. In 1940, he presented a philosophical paper on other minds to a meeting attended by Ludwig Wittgenstein at Cambridge University. Wittgenstein rejected the argument of his paper in discussion but praised Berlin for his intellectual honesty and integrity. Berlin was to remain at Oxford for the rest of his life, apart from a period working for British Information Services (BIS) in New York from 1940 to 1942 and for the British embassies in Washington, DC, and Moscow from then until 1946. Before crossing the Atlantic in 1940, Berlin took rest in Portugal for a few days. He stayed in Estoril, at the Hotel Palácio, between 19 and 24 October 1940.[25] Prior to this service, however, Berlin was barred from participation in the British war effort as a result of his being born in Latvia,[26] and because his left arm had been damaged at birth. In April 1943 he wrote a confidential analysis of members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for the Foreign Office; he described Senator Arthur Capper from Kansas as a solid, stolid, 78-year-old reactionary from the corn belt, who is the very voice of Mid-Western "grass root" isolationism.[27] For his services, he was appointed a CBE in the 1946 New Year Honours.[28] Meetings with Anna Akhmatova in Leningrad in November 1945 and January 1946 had a powerful effect on both of them, and serious repercussions for Akhmatova (who immortalised the meetings in her poetry).[29]

Personal life edit

In 1956 Berlin married Aline Elisabeth Yvonne Halban, née de Gunzbourg (1915–2014), the former wife of nuclear physicist Hans Halban, and a former winner of the ladies' golf championship of France.[30] She was from an exiled half Russian-aristocratic and half ennobled-Jewish banking and petroleum family (her mother was Yvonne Deutsch de la Meurthe and her grandfather was Emile Deutsch de la Meurthe, brother of Henri Deutsch de la Meurthe) based in Paris.

 
The Berlin Quadrangle, Wolfson College

He was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1959,[31] and a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1975.[32] He was instrumental in the founding, in 1966, of a new graduate college at Oxford University: Wolfson College. The college was founded to be a centre of academic excellence which, unlike many other colleges at Oxford, would also be based on a strong egalitarian and democratic ethos.[33] Berlin was a member of the Founding Council of the Rothermere American Institute at Oxford University.[34] As later revealed, when he was asked to evaluate the academic credentials of Isaac Deutscher, Isaiah Berlin argued against a promotion, because of the profoundly pro-communist militancy of the candidate.[35]

Berlin died in Oxford on 5 November 1997, aged 88.[5] He is buried there in Wolvercote Cemetery. On his death, the obituarist of The Independent wrote: "he was a man of formidable intellectual power with a rare gift for understanding a wide range of human motives, hopes and fears, and a prodigiously energetic capacity for enjoyment – of life, of people in all their variety, of their ideas and idiosyncrasies, of literature, of music, of art".[36] The same publication reported: "Isaiah Berlin was often described, especially in his old age, by means of superlatives: the world's greatest talker, the century's most inspired reader, one of the finest minds of our time. There is no doubt that he showed in more than one direction the unexpectedly large possibilities open to us at the top end of the range of human potential."[36] The front page of The New York Times concluded: "His was an exuberant life crowded with joys – the joy of thought, the joy of music, the joy of good friends. ... The theme that runs throughout his work is his concern with liberty and the dignity of human beings .... Sir Isaiah radiated well-being."[37]

Thought edit

Though like Our Lord and Socrates he does not publish much, he thinks and says a great deal and has had an enormous influence on our times

Maurice Bowra on Isaiah Berlin's publishing record.[38]

Lecturing and composition edit

Berlin did not enjoy writing, and his published work (including both his essays and books) was produced through dictation to a tape-recorder, or by the transcription of his improvised lectures and talks from recorded tapes. The work of transcribing his spoken word often placed a strain on his secretaries.[39] This reliance on dictation extended to his letters, which were recorded on a Grundig tape recorder. He would often dictate these letters while simultaneously conversing with friends, and his secretary would then transcribe them. At times, the secretary would inadvertently include the author's jokes and laughter in the transcribed text.[39] The product of this unique methodology was a writing style that mimicked his spoken discourse—animated, quick, and constantly jumping from one idea to another. His everyday conversation was literally mirrored in his works, complete with intricate grammar and punctuation.[39]

"Two Concepts of Liberty" edit

Berlin is known for his inaugural lecture, "Two Concepts of Liberty," delivered in 1958 as Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory at Oxford.[40][41] The lecture, later published as an essay, reintroduced the study of political philosophy to the methods of analytic philosophy. Berlin defined 'negative liberty' as absence of coercion or interference in private actions by an external political body, which Berlin derived from the Hobbesian definition of liberty. 'Positive liberty' Berlin maintained, could be thought of as self-mastery, which asks not what we are free from, but what we are free to do. Berlin contended that modern political thinkers often conflated positive liberty with rational action, based upon a rational knowledge to which, it is argued, only a certain elite or social group has access. This rationalist conflation was open to political abuses, which encroached on negative liberty, when such interpretations of positive liberty were, in the nineteenth century, used to defend nationalism, paternalism, social engineering, historicism, and collective rational control over human destiny.[42]

Counter-Enlightenment edit

Berlin's lectures on the Enlightenment and its critics (especially Giambattista Vico, Johann Gottfried Herder, Joseph de Maistre and Johann Georg Hamann, to whose views Berlin referred as the Counter-Enlightenment) contributed to his advocacy of an irreducibly pluralist ethical ontology.[1] In Three Critics of the Enlightenment, Berlin argues that Hamann was one of the first thinkers to conceive of human cognition as language – the articulation and use of symbols. Berlin saw Hamann as having recognised as the rationalist's Cartesian fallacy the notion that there are "clear and distinct" ideas "which can be contemplated by a kind of inner eye", without the use of language – a recognition greatly sharpened in the 20th century by Wittgenstein's private language argument.[43]

Value pluralism edit

For Berlin, values are creations of mankind, rather than products of nature waiting to be discovered. He argued, on the basis of the epistemic and empathetic access we have to other cultures across history, that the nature of mankind is such that certain values – the importance of individual liberty, for instance – will hold true across cultures, and this is what he meant by objective pluralism. Berlin's argument was partly grounded in Wittgenstein's later theory of language, which argued that inter-translatability was supervenient on a similarity in forms of life, with the inverse implication that our epistemic access to other cultures entails an ontologically contiguous value-structure. With his account of value pluralism, he proposed the view that moral values may be equally, or rather incommensurably, valid and yet incompatible, and may, therefore, come into conflict with one another in a way that admits of no resolution without reference to particular contexts of a decision. When values clash, it may not be that one is more important than the other: keeping a promise may conflict with the pursuit of truth; liberty may clash with social justice. Moral conflicts are "an intrinsic, irremovable element in human life". "These collisions of values are of the essence of what they are and what we are."[44] For Berlin, this clashing of incommensurate values within, no less than between, individuals, constitutes the tragedy of human life. Alan Brown suggests, however, that Berlin ignores the fact that values are commensurable in the extent to which they contribute to the human good.[45]

"The Hedgehog and the Fox" edit

"The Hedgehog and the Fox", a title referring to a fragment of the ancient Greek poet Archilochus, was one of Berlin's most popular essays with the general public, reprinted in numerous editions. Of the classification that gives the essay its title, Berlin once said "I never meant it very seriously. I meant it as a kind of enjoyable intellectual game, but it was taken seriously."[46]

Berlin expands upon this idea to divide writers and thinkers into two categories: hedgehogs, who view the world through the lens of a single defining idea (examples given include Plato), and foxes, who draw on a wide variety of experiences and for whom the world cannot be boiled down to a single idea (examples given include Aristotle).[47]

Positive liberty edit

Berlin promoted the notion of "positive liberty" in the sense of an intrinsic link between positive freedom and participatory, Athenian-style, democracy.[48] There is a contrast with "negative liberty." Liberals in the English-speaking tradition call for negative liberty, meaning a realm of private autonomy from which the state is legally excluded. In contrast French liberals ever since the French Revolution more often promote "positive liberty" – that is, liberty insofar as it is tethered to collectively defined ends. They praise the state as an essential tool to emancipate the people.[49][50]

Other work edit

Berlin's lecture "Historical Inevitability" (1954) focused on a controversy in the philosophy of history. Given the choice, whether one believes that "the lives of entire peoples and societies have been decisively influenced by exceptional individuals" or, conversely, that whatever happens occurs as a result of impersonal forces oblivious to human intentions, Berlin rejected both options and the choice itself as nonsensical. Berlin is also well known for his writings on Russian intellectual history, most of which are collected in Russian Thinkers (1978; 2nd ed. 2008) and edited, as most of Berlin's work, by Henry Hardy (in the case of this volume, jointly with Aileen Kelly). Berlin also contributed a number of essays on leading intellectuals and political figures of his time, including Winston Churchill, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and Chaim Weizmann. Eighteen of these character sketches were published together as "Personal Impressions" (1980; 2nd ed., with four additional essays, 1998; 3rd ed., with a further ten essays, 2014).[51]

Commemoration edit

A number of commemorative events for Isaiah Berlin are held at Oxford University, as well as scholarships given out in his name, including the Wolfson Isaiah Berlin Clarendon Scholarship, The Isaiah Berlin Visiting Professorship, and the annual Isaiah Berlin Lectures. The Berlin Quadrangle of Wolfson College, Oxford, is named after him. The Isaiah Berlin Association of Latvia was founded in 2011 to promote the ideas and values of Sir Isaiah Berlin, in particular by organising an annual Isaiah Berlin day and lectures in his memory.[52] At the British Academy, the Isaiah Berlin lecture series has been held since 2001.[53] Many volumes from Berlin's personal library were donated to Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Beer Sheva and form part of the Aranne Library collection. The Isaiah Berlin Room, on the third floor of the library, is a replica of his study at the University of Oxford.[54] There is also the Isaiah Berlin Society which takes place at his alma mater of St Paul's School. The society invites world famous academics to share their research into the answers to life's great concerns and to respond to students' questions. In the last few years they have hosted: A.C. Grayling, Brad Hooker, Jonathan Dancy, John Cottingham, Tim Crane, Arif Ahmed, Hugh Mellor and David Papineau.[55]

Published works edit

Apart from Unfinished Dialogue, all books/editions listed from 1978 onwards are edited (or, where stated, co-edited) by Henry Hardy, and all but Karl Marx are compilations or transcripts of lectures, essays, and letters. Details given are of first and latest UK editions, and current US editions. Most titles are also available as e-books. The twelve titles marked with a '+' are available in the US market in revised editions from Princeton University Press, with additional material by Berlin, and (except in the case of Karl Marx) new forewords by contemporary authors; the 5th edition of Karl Marx is also available in the UK.

  • +Karl Marx: His Life and Environment, Thornton Butterworth, 1939. 5th ed., Karl Marx, 2013, Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691156507.
  • The Age of Enlightenment: The Eighteenth-Century Philosophers, New American Library, 1956. Out of print. Second edition (2017) available online only.[56]
  • +The Hedgehog and the Fox: An Essay on Tolstoy's View of History, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1953. 2nd ed., 2014, Phoenix. ISBN 978-1780228433. 2nd US ed., Princeton University Press, 2013. ISBN 978-1400846634.
  • Four Essays on Liberty, Oxford University Press, 1969. Superseded by Liberty.
  • Vico and Herder: Two Studies in the History of Ideas, Chatto and Windus, 1976. Superseded by Three Critics of the Enlightenment.
  • Russian Thinkers (edited by Henry Hardy and Aileen Kelly), Hogarth Press, 1978. 2nd ed. (revised by Henry Hardy), Penguin, 2008. ISBN 978-0141442204.
  • +Concepts and Categories: Philosophical Essays, Hogarth Press, 1978. Pimlico. ISBN 978-0712665520. 2nd ed., 2013, Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691157498.
  • +Against the Current: Essays in the History of Ideas, Hogarth Press, 1979. Pimlico. ISBN 978-0712666909. 2nd ed., 2013, Princeton University Press.
  • +Personal Impressions, Hogarth Press, 1980. 2nd ed., Pimlico, 1998. ISBN 978-0712666015. 3rd ed., 2014, Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691157702.
  • +The Crooked Timber of Humanity: Chapters in the History of Ideas, John Murray, 1990. 2nd ed., Pimlico, 2013. ISBN 978-1845952082. 2nd ed., 2013, Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691155937.
  • The Magus of the North: J. G. Hamann and the Origins of Modern Irrationalism, John Murray, 1993. Superseded by Three Critics of the Enlightenment.
  • +The Sense of Reality: Studies in Ideas and their History, Chatto & Windus, 1996. Pimlico. ISBN 978-0712673679. 2nd ed., 2019, Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691182872.
  • The Proper Study of Mankind: An Anthology of Essays (edited by Henry Hardy and Roger Hausheer) [a one-volume selection from the whole of Berlin's work], Chatto & Windus, 1997. 2nd ed., Vintage, 2013. ISBN 978-0099582762.
  • +The Roots of Romanticism (lectures delivered in 1965), Chatto & Windus, 1999. [imlico. ISBN 978-0712665445. 2nd ed., 2013, Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691156200.
  • +Three Critics of the Enlightenment: Vico, Hamann, Herder, Pimlico, 2000. 2nd ed., 2013. ISBN 978-1845952136. 2nd ed., 2013, Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691157658.
  • +The Power of Ideas, Chatto & Windus, 2000. Pimlico. ISBN 978-0712665544. 2nd ed., 2013, Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691157603.
  • +Freedom and Its Betrayal: Six Enemies of Human Liberty (lectures delivered in 1952), Chatto & Windus, 2002. Pimlico. ISBN 978-0712668422. 2nd ed., 2014, Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691114996.
  • Liberty [revised and expanded edition of Four Essays on Liberty], Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0199249893.
  • The Soviet Mind: Russian Culture under Communism, Brookings Institution Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0815721550. 2nd ed., Brookings Classics, 2016. ISBN 978-0815728870.
  • +Political Ideas in the Romantic Age: Their Rise and Influence on Modern Thought (1952), Chatto & Windus, 2006. ISBN 0701179090. Pimlico, ISBN 978-1844139262. 2nd ed., 2014, Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691126951.
  • (with Beata Polanowska-Sygulska) Unfinished Dialogue, Prometheus, 2006. ISBN 978-1591023760.

Letters edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Cherniss, Joshua; Hardy, Henry (25 May 2010). "Isaiah Berlin". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  2. ^ Rosen, Frederick (2005). Classical Utilitarianism from Hume to Mill. Routledge. p. 251. According to Berlin, the most eloquent of all defenders of freedom and privacy [was] Benjamin Constant, who had not forgotten the Jacobin dictatorship
  3. ^ Brockliss, Laurence; Robertson, Ritchie (2016). Isaiah Berlin and the Enlightenment. Oxford University Press. Berlin refers to Diderot and Lessing as 'two of my favorite thinkers in the eighteenth century.'
  4. ^ His date of birth was officially registered as 24 May, according to the Julian calendar then in force in the Russian Empire. Latvian State Historical Archive, Rīgas rabināts, 4346. fonds, 2. apraksts, 58. lieta, 71. lp. o. p., 72. lp.
  5. ^ a b "Philosopher and political thinker Sir Isaiah Berlin dies". BBC News. 8 November 1997. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  6. ^ (PDF). Pimlico. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 May 2016. Retrieved 6 September 2016.
  7. ^ The New York Review of Books, 23 October 2014, "A Message to the 21st Century", http://www.sjpcommunications.org/images/uploads/documents/Isaiah_Berlin.pdf 9 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Joshua L. Cherniss and Steven B. Smith (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Isaiah Berlin, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2018, p. 13.
  9. ^ a b Isaiah Berlin: In Conversation with Steven Lukes, Salmagundi, No. 120 (Fall 1998), pp. 52–134
  10. ^ a b "Isaiah Berlin: Connection with Riga" (PDF). Retrieved 24 March 2018.
  11. ^ In their matrimonial record from 1906, available at the Jewish genealogy site JewishGen.org, mother's name is spelled Musya Volshonok.
  12. ^ Ignatieff 1998, p. 30
  13. ^ Ignatieff 1998, p. 21
  14. ^ Ignatieff 1998, p. 26
  15. ^ Ignatieff 1998, p. 24
  16. ^ Isaiah Berlin and the Policeman Posted on 29 March 2014, Lesley Chamberlain
  17. ^ Ignatieff 1998, p. 31
  18. ^ Ignatieff 1998, pp. 33–37
  19. ^ The Book of Isaiah: Personal Impressions of Isaiah Berlin, edited by Henry Hardy, (Boydell & Brewer 2013), p. 180
  20. ^ Cultural Diversity, Liberal Pluralism and Schools: Isaiah Berlin and Education (Routledge, 2006), Neil Burtonwood, p. 11
  21. ^ Dubnov A.M. (2012) "Becoming a Russian-Jew". In: Isaiah Berlin. Palgrave Studies in Cultural and Intellectual History'. Palgrave Macmillan, New York
  22. ^ Bonavia, Michael (1990). London Before I Forget. The Self Publishing Association Ltd. p. 29.
  23. ^ Ignatieff 1998, p. 57
  24. ^ "Sir Isaiah's modest Zionism". Haaretz.
  25. ^ Exiles Memorial Center.
  26. ^ "A Biography of Isaiah Berlin".
  27. ^ Hachey, Thomas E. (Winter 1973–1974). (PDF). Wisconsin Magazine of History. 57 (2): 141–153. JSTOR 4634869. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 October 2013.
  28. ^ London Gazette, 1 January 1946.
  29. ^ Brooks, David (2 May 2014), "Love Story", The New York Times.
  30. ^ "Lady Berlin – obituary". The Telegraph. 26 August 2014. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  31. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter B" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 16 June 2011.
  32. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
  33. ^ Ignatieff 1998, p. 268
  34. ^ . The Rothermere American Institute. Archived from the original on 17 November 2012. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
  35. ^ Isaiah Berlin, Building: Letters 1960–1975, ed. Henry Hardy and Mark Pottle (London: Chatto and Windus, 2013), 377–378.
  36. ^ a b Hardy, Henry (7 November 1997). "Obituary: Sir Isaiah Berlin". The Independent. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  37. ^ Berger, Marilyn (10 November 1997). "Isaiah Berlin, Philosopher And Pluralist, Is Dead at 88". The New York Times. Retrieved 7 March 2012.
  38. ^ Letter to Noel Annan quoted in Lloyd-Jones, p. 53.
  39. ^ a b c Ignatieff 1998, p. 113
  40. ^ Warburton, Nigel (2001). "Two Concepts of Liberty". Freedom: An Introduction with Readings. The Open University. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-21246-5. Isaiah Berlin's essay 'Two Concepts of Liberty'* is one of the most important pieces of post-war political philosophy. It was originally given as a lecture in Oxford in 1958 and has been much discussed since then. In this extract from the lecture Berlin identifies the two different concepts of freedom – negative and positive – which provide the framework for his wide-ranging discussion.
  41. ^ "Two Concepts of Liberty". berlin.wolf.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 31 December 2023.
  42. ^ Kocis, Robert (17 November 2023). Isaiah Berlin: A Kantian and Post-Idealist Thinker. Political Philosophy Now. University of Wales Press. pp. 71–95. ISBN 9781786838957.
  43. ^ D. Bleich (2006). "The Materiality of Reading". New Literary History. 37 (3): 607–629. doi:10.1353/nlh.2006.0000. S2CID 144957435.
  44. ^ Berlin, Isaiah (1997). Hardy, Henry; Hausheer, Roger (eds.). The Proper Study of Mankind: An Anthology of Essays. Chatto and Windus. pp. 11, 238. ISBN 0701165278. OCLC 443072603.
  45. ^ Brown, Alan (1986). Modern Political Philosophy: Theories of the Just Society. Middlesex: Penguin Books. pp. 157–158. ISBN 0140225285. OCLC 14371928.
  46. ^ Jahanbegloo, Ramin (1992). Conversations with Isaiah Berlin. Halban Publishers. p. 188. ISBN 1870015487. OCLC 26358922.
  47. ^ Santos, Gonçalo (2021). Chinese Village Life Today: Building Families in an Age of Transition. Seattle: University of Washington Press. pp. xiii. ISBN 978-0-295-74738-5.
  48. ^ Isaiah Berlin, "Two concepts of liberty." Liberty Reader (Routledge, 2017) pp. 33–57 online.
  49. ^ Michael C. Behrent, "Liberal Dispositions: Recent scholarship on French Liberalism." Modern Intellectual History 13.2 (2016): 447–477.
  50. ^ Steven J. Heyman, "Positive and negative liberty." Chicago-Kent Law Review. 68 (1992): 81–90. online
  51. ^ Berlin, Isaiah (2014). Personal Impressions. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0691157702 – via press.princeton.edu.
  52. ^ "The Isaiah Berlin Day in Riga 2015". www.fondsdots.lv.
  53. ^ "Isaiah Berlin Lectures".
  54. ^ "Ben-Gurion University of the Negev – Rare correspondence between Sir Isaiah Berlin and David Ben-Gurion on "Who is a Jew?" donated to BGU". in.bgu.ac.il.
  55. ^ "Isaiah Berlin Society". St Paul's School.
  56. ^ "The Age of Enlightenment" (PDF). 2017. Retrieved 29 August 2017.

Sources edit

Further reading edit

Books edit

  • Baum, Bruce and Robert Nichols, eds. Isaiah Berlin and the Politics of Freedom: 'Two Concepts of Liberty' 50 Years Later, (Routledge, 2013).
  • Benhabib, Seyla. Exile, Statelessness, and Migration: Playing Chess with History from Hannah Arendt to Isaiah Berlin (Princeton University Press, 2018)
  • Blattberg, Charles. From Pluralist to Patriotic Politics: Putting Practice First, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2000. ISBN 0198296886. A critique of Berlin's value pluralism. Blattberg has also criticised Berlin for taking politics "too seriously."
  • Brockliss, Laurence and Ritchie Robertson (eds.), Isaiah Berlin and the Enlightenment, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016.
  • Caute, David, Isaac and Isaiah: The Covert Punishment of a Cold War Heretic (Yale University Press, 2013)
  • Cherniss, Joshua, and Steven Smith, eds. The Cambridge Companion to Isaiah Berlin (Cambridge University Press, 2018). excerpt
  • Crowder, George. Isaiah Berlin: Liberty and Pluralism, Cambridge: Polity Press, 2004. ISBN 0745624766.
  • Crowder, George. The Problem of Value Pluralism: Isaiah Berlin and Beyond (Routledge, 2019)
  • Dubnov, Arie M. Isaiah Berlin: The Journey of a Jewish Liberal (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
  • Galipeau, Claude. Isaiah Berlin's Liberalism, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994. ISBN 0198278683.
  • Gray, John. Isaiah Berlin: An Interpretation of His Thought, (Princeton University Press, 1996). ISBN 069104824X.
  • Hardy, Henry, ed. The Book of Isaiah: Personal Impressions of Isaiah Berlin 1 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine (The Boydell Press, 2009).
  • Ignatieff, Michael. Isaiah Berlin: A Life (Chatto and Windus, 1998)
  • Lyons, Johnny. The Philosophy of Isaiah Berlin (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2020). excerpt
  • Müller, Jan-Werner, ed. Isaiah Berlin’s Cold War Liberalism (Springer, 2019).
  • Walicki, Andrzej. Encounters with Isaiah Berlin: Story of an Intellectual Friendship (Peter Lang, 2011).

Tributes, obituaries, articles and profiles edit

  • .
  • A tribute to Isaiah Berlin & A conversation with Isaiah Berlin on The Philosopher's Zone, ABC, 6 & 13 June 2009.
  • Isaiah Berlin and the history of ideas.
  • The Isaiah Berlin Virtual Library, Wolfson College, Oxford.
  • A podcast interview with Henry Hardy on Berlin's pluralism.
  • A recording of the last of Berlin's Mellon Lectures, Wolfson College, Oxford.
  • Biographical information on Sir Isaiah Berlin.
  • A section from the last essay written by Isaiah Berlin, The New York Review of Books, Vol. XLV, Number 8 (1998).
  • Ned O'Gorman, 'My dinners with Isaiah: the music of a philosopher's life – Sir Isaiah Berlin' – includes related article on Isaiah Berlin's commitment to ideals of genuine understanding over intellectual mastery, .
  • .
  • Anecdote from Wolfson College's tribute page.
  • Hywel Williams: An English liberal stooge.
  • Letter to Berlin from Tony Blair, 23 October 1997.
  • Assaf Inbari, "The Spectacles of Isaiah Berlin", Azure (Spring 2006).
  • Obituary by Henry Hardy.
  • Joshua Cherniss, [usurped], in the Oxonian Review
  • Joshua Cherniss, [usurped], review of Freedom and its Betrayal in the Oxonian Review
  • Isaiah Berlin, Beyond the Wit, Evan R. Goldstein.
  • Berlin archive and author page from The New York Review of Books.

External links edit

External videos
  Booknotes interview with Michael Ignatieff on Isaiah Berlin: A Life, 24 January 1999, C-SPAN
  • Website and bibliography of Isaiah Berlin's writings
  • Full text of Concepts and Categories 19 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • Entry on Isaiah Berlin in the International Encyclopedia of Ethics
  • Cherniss, Joshua; Hardy, Henry. "Isaiah Berlin". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Bibliography at Wolfson College
  • Bragg, Melvyn, "War in the 20th Century", In Our Time, BBC Radio Four, including a discussion with Michael Ignatieff, biographer, of the ideas of Berlin, a year after the latter's death
  • Sir Isaiah Berlin's Blue Plaque on Headington House
  • Broadcasts
Academic offices
Preceded by Chichele Professor of
Social and Political Theory

1957–1967
Succeeded by
New office President of Wolfson College, Oxford
1965–1975
Succeeded by
Professional and academic associations
Preceded by President of the Aristotelian Society
1963–1964
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the British Academy
1974–1978
Succeeded by
Awards
Preceded by Jerusalem Prize
1979
Succeeded by

isaiah, berlin, this, article, about, 20th, century, philosopher, 18th, century, rabbi, rabbi, june, 1909, november, 1997, russian, british, social, political, theorist, philosopher, historian, ideas, although, became, increasingly, averse, writing, publicatio. This article is about the 20th century philosopher For the 18th century rabbi see Isaiah Berlin rabbi Sir Isaiah Berlin OM CBE FBA 24 May 6 June 1909 4 5 November 1997 was a Russian British social and political theorist philosopher and historian of ideas 5 Although he became increasingly averse to writing for publication his improvised lectures and talks were sometimes recorded and transcribed and many of his spoken words were converted into published essays and books both by himself and by others especially his principal editor from 1974 Henry Hardy SirIsaiah BerlinOM CBE FBABerlin in 1983Born 1909 06 06 6 June 1909Riga Livonia Russian EmpireDied5 November 1997 1997 11 05 aged 88 Oxford England United KingdomAlma materCorpus Christi College OxfordSpouseAline de Gunzbourg m 1956 wbr Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolAnalyticliberalism 1 InstitutionsNew College Oxford All Souls College Oxford Wolfson College OxfordDoctoral studentsFrederick C Beiser James H Billington David McLellan Larry Siedentop Yuli Tamir Charles TaylorOther notable studentsMarshall Berman G A Cohen Bob RaeMain interestsPolitical philosophyphilosophy of historyhistory of ideasethicsMarxismmodern historyRussian historyRussian literatureRomanticismNotable ideasNegative Positive liberty distinctionCounter Enlightenmentvalue pluralismBorn in Riga now the capital of Latvia then a part of the Russian Empire in 1909 he moved to Petrograd Russia at the age of six where he witnessed the revolutions of 1917 In 1921 his family moved to the UK and he was educated at St Paul s School London and Corpus Christi College Oxford 6 In 1932 at the age of twenty three Berlin was elected to a prize fellowship at All Souls College Oxford In addition to his own prolific output he translated works by Ivan Turgenev from Russian into English and during World War II worked for the British Diplomatic Service From 1957 to 1967 he was Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory at the University of Oxford He was president of the Aristotelian Society from 1963 to 1964 In 1966 he played a critical role in creating Wolfson College Oxford and became its founding President Berlin was appointed a CBE in 1946 knighted in 1957 and appointed to the Order of Merit in 1971 He was President of the British Academy from 1974 to 1978 He also received the 1979 Jerusalem Prize for his lifelong defence of civil liberties and on 25 November 1994 he received the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws at the University of Toronto for which occasion he prepared a short credo as he called it in a letter to a friend now known as A Message to the Twenty First Century to be read on his behalf at the ceremony 7 An annual Isaiah Berlin Lecture is held at the Hampstead Synagogue at Wolfson College Oxford at the British Academy and in Riga Berlin s work on liberal theory and on value pluralism as well as his opposition to Marxism and communism has had a lasting influence Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Personal life 4 Thought 4 1 Lecturing and composition 4 2 Two Concepts of Liberty 4 3 Counter Enlightenment 4 4 Value pluralism 4 5 The Hedgehog and the Fox 4 6 Positive liberty 4 7 Other work 5 Commemoration 6 Published works 6 1 Letters 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 10 1 Books 10 2 Tributes obituaries articles and profiles 11 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Plaque marking what was once Berlin s childhood home designed by Mikhail Eisenstein in Riga engraved in Latvian English and Hebrew with the tribute The British philosopher Sir Isaiah Berlin lived in this house 1909 1915 nbsp The Angliyskaya Embankment in Saint Petersburg where Berlin lived as a child during the Russian RevolutionsBerlin was born on 6 June 1909 into a wealthy Jewish family the only son of Mendel Berlin a timber trader and a direct descendant of Shneur Zalman founder of Chabad Hasidism and his wife Marie nee Volshonok 8 9 His family owned a timber company one of the largest in the Baltics 10 as well as forests in Russia 9 from where the timber was floated down the Daugava river to its sawmills in Riga As his father who was the head of the Riga Association of Timber Merchants 10 worked for the company in its dealings with Western companies he was fluent not only in Yiddish Russian and German but also in French and English His Russian speaking mother Marie Musya Volshonok 11 was also fluent in Yiddish and Latvian 12 Isaiah Berlin spent his first six years in Riga and later lived in Andreapol a small timber town near Pskov effectively owned by the family business 13 and Petrograd now St Petersburg In Petrograd the family lived first on Vasilevsky Island and then on Angliiskii Prospekt on the mainland On Angliiskii Prospekt they shared their building with other tenants including Rimsky Korsakov s daughter an assistant Minister of Finnish affairs and Princess Emeretinsky With the onset of the October Revolution of 1917 the fortunes of the building s tenants were rapidly reversed with both the Princess Emeretinsky and Rimsky Korsakov s daughter soon being made to stoke the building s stoves and sweep the yards 14 Berlin witnessed the February and October Revolutions both from his apartment windows and from walks in the city with his governess where he recalled the crowds of protesters marching on the Winter Palace Square 15 One particular childhood memory of the February Revolution marked his lifelong opposition to violence with Berlin saying Well I was seven and a half and something and then I was did I tell you the terrible sight of the policeman being dragged not policeman a sharp shooter from the rooftop being dragged away by a lynching bee In the early parts of the revolution the only people who remained loyal to the Tsar was the police the Pharaon I ve never seen the term Pharaon in the histories of the Russian Revolution They existed and they did sniping from the rooftops or attics I saw a man like that a Pharaon That s not in the books but it is true And they sniped at the revolutionaries from roofs or attics and things And this man was dragged down obviously by a crowd and was being obviously taken to a not very agreeable fate and I saw this man struggling in the middle of a crowd of about twenty T hat gave me a permanent horror of violence which has remained with me for the rest of my life 16 nbsp English Heritage blue plaque at 33 Upper Addison Gardens Holland Park LondonFeeling increasingly oppressed by life under Bolshevik rule which identified the family as bourgeoisie the family left Petrograd on 5 October 1920 for Riga but encounters with anti Semitism and difficulties with the Latvian authorities convinced them to leave and they moved to Britain in early 1921 Mendel in January Isaiah and Marie at the beginning of February when Berlin was eleven 17 In London the family first stayed in Surbiton where he was sent to Arundel House for preparatory school then within the year they bought a house in Kensington and six years later in Hampstead Berlin s native language was Russian and his English was virtually nonexistent at first but he reached proficiency in English within a year at around the age of 12 18 In addition to Russian and English Berlin was fluent in French German and Italian and he knew Hebrew Latin and Ancient Greek Despite his fluency in English however in later life Berlin s Oxford English accent would sound increasingly Russian in its vowel sounds 19 Whenever he was described as an English philosopher Berlin always insisted that he was not an English philosopher but would forever be a Russian Jew I am a Russian Jew from Riga and all my years in England cannot change this I love England I have been well treated here and I cherish many things about English life but I am a Russian Jew that is how I was born and that is who I will be to the end of my life 20 21 Education editBerlin was educated at St Paul s School in London According to Michael Bonavia a British author and son of Ferruccio Bonavia who was at school with him he made astonishing feats in the school s Junior Debating Society and the School Union Society The rapid even flow of his ideas the succession of confident references to authors whom most of his contemporaries had never heard left them mildly stupefied Yet there was no backlash no resentment at these breathless marathons because Berlin s essential modesty and good manners eliminated jealousy and disarmed hostility 22 After leaving St Paul s Berlin applied to Balliol College Oxford but was denied admission after a chaotic interview Berlin decided to apply again only to a different college Corpus Christi College Oxford Berlin was admitted and commenced his literae humaniores degree He graduated in 1928 taking first class honours in his final examinations and winning the John Locke Prize for his performance in the philosophy papers in which he outscored A J Ayer 23 He subsequently took another degree at Oxford in philosophy politics and economics again taking first class honours after less than a year on the course He was appointed a tutor in philosophy at New College Oxford citation needed and soon afterwards was elected to a prize fellowship at All Souls College Oxford the first unconverted Jew to achieve this fellowship at All Souls 24 While still a student he befriended Ayer with whom he was to share a lifelong amicable rivalry Stuart Hampshire Richard Wollheim Maurice Bowra Roy Beddington Stephen Spender Inez Pearn J L Austin and Nicolas Nabokov In 1940 he presented a philosophical paper on other minds to a meeting attended by Ludwig Wittgenstein at Cambridge University Wittgenstein rejected the argument of his paper in discussion but praised Berlin for his intellectual honesty and integrity Berlin was to remain at Oxford for the rest of his life apart from a period working for British Information Services BIS in New York from 1940 to 1942 and for the British embassies in Washington DC and Moscow from then until 1946 Before crossing the Atlantic in 1940 Berlin took rest in Portugal for a few days He stayed in Estoril at the Hotel Palacio between 19 and 24 October 1940 25 Prior to this service however Berlin was barred from participation in the British war effort as a result of his being born in Latvia 26 and because his left arm had been damaged at birth In April 1943 he wrote a confidential analysis of members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for the Foreign Office he described Senator Arthur Capper from Kansas as a solid stolid 78 year old reactionary from the corn belt who is the very voice of Mid Western grass root isolationism 27 For his services he was appointed a CBE in the 1946 New Year Honours 28 Meetings with Anna Akhmatova in Leningrad in November 1945 and January 1946 had a powerful effect on both of them and serious repercussions for Akhmatova who immortalised the meetings in her poetry 29 Personal life editIn 1956 Berlin married Aline Elisabeth Yvonne Halban nee de Gunzbourg 1915 2014 the former wife of nuclear physicist Hans Halban and a former winner of the ladies golf championship of France 30 She was from an exiled half Russian aristocratic and half ennobled Jewish banking and petroleum family her mother was Yvonne Deutsch de la Meurthe and her grandfather was Emile Deutsch de la Meurthe brother of Henri Deutsch de la Meurthe based in Paris nbsp The Berlin Quadrangle Wolfson CollegeHe was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1959 31 and a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1975 32 He was instrumental in the founding in 1966 of a new graduate college at Oxford University Wolfson College The college was founded to be a centre of academic excellence which unlike many other colleges at Oxford would also be based on a strong egalitarian and democratic ethos 33 Berlin was a member of the Founding Council of the Rothermere American Institute at Oxford University 34 As later revealed when he was asked to evaluate the academic credentials of Isaac Deutscher Isaiah Berlin argued against a promotion because of the profoundly pro communist militancy of the candidate 35 Berlin died in Oxford on 5 November 1997 aged 88 5 He is buried there in Wolvercote Cemetery On his death the obituarist of The Independent wrote he was a man of formidable intellectual power with a rare gift for understanding a wide range of human motives hopes and fears and a prodigiously energetic capacity for enjoyment of life of people in all their variety of their ideas and idiosyncrasies of literature of music of art 36 The same publication reported Isaiah Berlin was often described especially in his old age by means of superlatives the world s greatest talker the century s most inspired reader one of the finest minds of our time There is no doubt that he showed in more than one direction the unexpectedly large possibilities open to us at the top end of the range of human potential 36 The front page of The New York Times concluded His was an exuberant life crowded with joys the joy of thought the joy of music the joy of good friends The theme that runs throughout his work is his concern with liberty and the dignity of human beings Sir Isaiah radiated well being 37 Thought editThough like Our Lord and Socrates he does not publish much he thinks and says a great deal and has had an enormous influence on our times Maurice Bowra on Isaiah Berlin s publishing record 38 Lecturing and composition edit Berlin did not enjoy writing and his published work including both his essays and books was produced through dictation to a tape recorder or by the transcription of his improvised lectures and talks from recorded tapes The work of transcribing his spoken word often placed a strain on his secretaries 39 This reliance on dictation extended to his letters which were recorded on a Grundig tape recorder He would often dictate these letters while simultaneously conversing with friends and his secretary would then transcribe them At times the secretary would inadvertently include the author s jokes and laughter in the transcribed text 39 The product of this unique methodology was a writing style that mimicked his spoken discourse animated quick and constantly jumping from one idea to another His everyday conversation was literally mirrored in his works complete with intricate grammar and punctuation 39 Two Concepts of Liberty edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Two Concepts of Liberty Berlin is known for his inaugural lecture Two Concepts of Liberty delivered in 1958 as Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory at Oxford 40 41 The lecture later published as an essay reintroduced the study of political philosophy to the methods of analytic philosophy Berlin defined negative liberty as absence of coercion or interference in private actions by an external political body which Berlin derived from the Hobbesian definition of liberty Positive liberty Berlin maintained could be thought of as self mastery which asks not what we are free from but what we are free to do Berlin contended that modern political thinkers often conflated positive liberty with rational action based upon a rational knowledge to which it is argued only a certain elite or social group has access This rationalist conflation was open to political abuses which encroached on negative liberty when such interpretations of positive liberty were in the nineteenth century used to defend nationalism paternalism social engineering historicism and collective rational control over human destiny 42 Counter Enlightenment edit Main article Counter Enlightenment Further information Three Critics of the Enlightenment Berlin s lectures on the Enlightenment and its critics especially Giambattista Vico Johann Gottfried Herder Joseph de Maistre and Johann Georg Hamann to whose views Berlin referred as the Counter Enlightenment contributed to his advocacy of an irreducibly pluralist ethical ontology 1 In Three Critics of the Enlightenment Berlin argues that Hamann was one of the first thinkers to conceive of human cognition as language the articulation and use of symbols Berlin saw Hamann as having recognised as the rationalist s Cartesian fallacy the notion that there are clear and distinct ideas which can be contemplated by a kind of inner eye without the use of language a recognition greatly sharpened in the 20th century by Wittgenstein s private language argument 43 Value pluralism edit Main article Value pluralism For Berlin values are creations of mankind rather than products of nature waiting to be discovered He argued on the basis of the epistemic and empathetic access we have to other cultures across history that the nature of mankind is such that certain values the importance of individual liberty for instance will hold true across cultures and this is what he meant by objective pluralism Berlin s argument was partly grounded in Wittgenstein s later theory of language which argued that inter translatability was supervenient on a similarity in forms of life with the inverse implication that our epistemic access to other cultures entails an ontologically contiguous value structure With his account of value pluralism he proposed the view that moral values may be equally or rather incommensurably valid and yet incompatible and may therefore come into conflict with one another in a way that admits of no resolution without reference to particular contexts of a decision When values clash it may not be that one is more important than the other keeping a promise may conflict with the pursuit of truth liberty may clash with social justice Moral conflicts are an intrinsic irremovable element in human life These collisions of values are of the essence of what they are and what we are 44 For Berlin this clashing of incommensurate values within no less than between individuals constitutes the tragedy of human life Alan Brown suggests however that Berlin ignores the fact that values are commensurable in the extent to which they contribute to the human good 45 The Hedgehog and the Fox edit Main article The Hedgehog and the Fox The Hedgehog and the Fox a title referring to a fragment of the ancient Greek poet Archilochus was one of Berlin s most popular essays with the general public reprinted in numerous editions Of the classification that gives the essay its title Berlin once said I never meant it very seriously I meant it as a kind of enjoyable intellectual game but it was taken seriously 46 Berlin expands upon this idea to divide writers and thinkers into two categories hedgehogs who view the world through the lens of a single defining idea examples given include Plato and foxes who draw on a wide variety of experiences and for whom the world cannot be boiled down to a single idea examples given include Aristotle 47 Positive liberty edit Berlin promoted the notion of positive liberty in the sense of an intrinsic link between positive freedom and participatory Athenian style democracy 48 There is a contrast with negative liberty Liberals in the English speaking tradition call for negative liberty meaning a realm of private autonomy from which the state is legally excluded In contrast French liberals ever since the French Revolution more often promote positive liberty that is liberty insofar as it is tethered to collectively defined ends They praise the state as an essential tool to emancipate the people 49 50 Other work edit Berlin s lecture Historical Inevitability 1954 focused on a controversy in the philosophy of history Given the choice whether one believes that the lives of entire peoples and societies have been decisively influenced by exceptional individuals or conversely that whatever happens occurs as a result of impersonal forces oblivious to human intentions Berlin rejected both options and the choice itself as nonsensical Berlin is also well known for his writings on Russian intellectual history most of which are collected in Russian Thinkers 1978 2nd ed 2008 and edited as most of Berlin s work by Henry Hardy in the case of this volume jointly with Aileen Kelly Berlin also contributed a number of essays on leading intellectuals and political figures of his time including Winston Churchill Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Chaim Weizmann Eighteen of these character sketches were published together as Personal Impressions 1980 2nd ed with four additional essays 1998 3rd ed with a further ten essays 2014 51 Commemoration editA number of commemorative events for Isaiah Berlin are held at Oxford University as well as scholarships given out in his name including the Wolfson Isaiah Berlin Clarendon Scholarship The Isaiah Berlin Visiting Professorship and the annual Isaiah Berlin Lectures The Berlin Quadrangle of Wolfson College Oxford is named after him The Isaiah Berlin Association of Latvia was founded in 2011 to promote the ideas and values of Sir Isaiah Berlin in particular by organising an annual Isaiah Berlin day and lectures in his memory 52 At the British Academy the Isaiah Berlin lecture series has been held since 2001 53 Many volumes from Berlin s personal library were donated to Ben Gurion University of the Negev in Beer Sheva and form part of the Aranne Library collection The Isaiah Berlin Room on the third floor of the library is a replica of his study at the University of Oxford 54 There is also the Isaiah Berlin Society which takes place at his alma mater of St Paul s School The society invites world famous academics to share their research into the answers to life s great concerns and to respond to students questions In the last few years they have hosted A C Grayling Brad Hooker Jonathan Dancy John Cottingham Tim Crane Arif Ahmed Hugh Mellor and David Papineau 55 Published works editApart from Unfinished Dialogue all books editions listed from 1978 onwards are edited or where stated co edited by Henry Hardy and all but Karl Marx are compilations or transcripts of lectures essays and letters Details given are of first and latest UK editions and current US editions Most titles are also available as e books The twelve titles marked with a are available in the US market in revised editions from Princeton University Press with additional material by Berlin and except in the case of Karl Marx new forewords by contemporary authors the 5th edition of Karl Marx is also available in the UK Karl Marx His Life and Environment Thornton Butterworth 1939 5th ed Karl Marx 2013 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691156507 The Age of Enlightenment The Eighteenth Century Philosophers New American Library 1956 Out of print Second edition 2017 available online only 56 The Hedgehog and the Fox An Essay on Tolstoy s View of History Weidenfeld amp Nicolson London 1953 2nd ed 2014 Phoenix ISBN 978 1780228433 2nd US ed Princeton University Press 2013 ISBN 978 1400846634 Four Essays on Liberty Oxford University Press 1969 Superseded by Liberty Vico and Herder Two Studies in the History of Ideas Chatto and Windus 1976 Superseded by Three Critics of the Enlightenment Russian Thinkers edited by Henry Hardy and Aileen Kelly Hogarth Press 1978 2nd ed revised by Henry Hardy Penguin 2008 ISBN 978 0141442204 Concepts and Categories Philosophical Essays Hogarth Press 1978 Pimlico ISBN 978 0712665520 2nd ed 2013 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691157498 Against the Current Essays in the History of Ideas Hogarth Press 1979 Pimlico ISBN 978 0712666909 2nd ed 2013 Princeton University Press Personal Impressions Hogarth Press 1980 2nd ed Pimlico 1998 ISBN 978 0712666015 3rd ed 2014 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691157702 The Crooked Timber of Humanity Chapters in the History of Ideas John Murray 1990 2nd ed Pimlico 2013 ISBN 978 1845952082 2nd ed 2013 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691155937 The Magus of the North J G Hamann and the Origins of Modern Irrationalism John Murray 1993 Superseded by Three Critics of the Enlightenment The Sense of Reality Studies in Ideas and their History Chatto amp Windus 1996 Pimlico ISBN 978 0712673679 2nd ed 2019 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691182872 The Proper Study of Mankind An Anthology of Essays edited by Henry Hardy and Roger Hausheer a one volume selection from the whole of Berlin s work Chatto amp Windus 1997 2nd ed Vintage 2013 ISBN 978 0099582762 The Roots of Romanticism lectures delivered in 1965 Chatto amp Windus 1999 imlico ISBN 978 0712665445 2nd ed 2013 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691156200 Three Critics of the Enlightenment Vico Hamann Herder Pimlico 2000 2nd ed 2013 ISBN 978 1845952136 2nd ed 2013 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691157658 The Power of Ideas Chatto amp Windus 2000 Pimlico ISBN 978 0712665544 2nd ed 2013 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691157603 Freedom and Its Betrayal Six Enemies of Human Liberty lectures delivered in 1952 Chatto amp Windus 2002 Pimlico ISBN 978 0712668422 2nd ed 2014 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691114996 Liberty revised and expanded edition of Four Essays on Liberty Oxford University Press 2002 ISBN 978 0199249893 The Soviet Mind Russian Culture under Communism Brookings Institution Press 2004 ISBN 978 0815721550 2nd ed Brookings Classics 2016 ISBN 978 0815728870 Political Ideas in the Romantic Age Their Rise and Influence on Modern Thought 1952 Chatto amp Windus 2006 ISBN 0701179090 Pimlico ISBN 978 1844139262 2nd ed 2014 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691126951 with Beata Polanowska Sygulska Unfinished Dialogue Prometheus 2006 ISBN 978 1591023760 Letters edit Flourishing Letters 1928 1946 edited by Henry Hardy Chatto amp Windus 2004 ISBN 978 0 701174200 Pimlico ISBN 978 0712635653 Enlightening Letters 1946 1960 edited by Henry Hardy and Jennifer Holmes Chatto amp Windus 2009 ISBN 978 0701178895 Pimlico ISBN 978 1844138340 Building Letters 1960 1975 edited by Henry Hardy and Mark Pottle Chatto amp Windus 2013 ISBN 978 0701185763 Affirming Letters 1975 1997 edited by Henry Hardy and Mark Pottle Chatto amp Windus 2015 ISBN 978 1784740085 See also editGerald C MacCallum Jr References edit a b Cherniss Joshua Hardy Henry 25 May 2010 Isaiah Berlin Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 7 March 2012 Rosen Frederick 2005 Classical Utilitarianism from Hume to Mill Routledge p 251 According to Berlin the most eloquent of all defenders of freedom and privacy was Benjamin Constant who had not forgotten the Jacobin dictatorship Brockliss Laurence Robertson Ritchie 2016 Isaiah Berlin and the Enlightenment Oxford University Press Berlin refers to Diderot and Lessing as two of my favorite thinkers in the eighteenth century His date of birth was officially registered as 24 May according to the Julian calendar then in force in the Russian Empire Latvian State Historical Archive Rigas rabinats 4346 fonds 2 apraksts 58 lieta 71 lp o p 72 lp a b Philosopher and political thinker Sir Isaiah Berlin dies BBC News 8 November 1997 Retrieved 7 March 2012 Concepts and Categories Philosophical Essays PDF Pimlico Archived from the original PDF on 19 May 2016 Retrieved 6 September 2016 The New York Review of Books 23 October 2014 A Message to the 21st Century http www sjpcommunications org images uploads documents Isaiah Berlin pdf Archived 9 January 2021 at the Wayback Machine Joshua L Cherniss and Steven B Smith eds The Cambridge Companion to Isaiah Berlin Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2018 p 13 a b Isaiah Berlin In Conversation with Steven Lukes Salmagundi No 120 Fall 1998 pp 52 134 a b Isaiah Berlin Connection with Riga PDF Retrieved 24 March 2018 In their matrimonial record from 1906 available at the Jewish genealogy site JewishGen org mother s name is spelled Musya Volshonok Ignatieff 1998 p 30 Ignatieff 1998 p 21 Ignatieff 1998 p 26 Ignatieff 1998 p 24 Isaiah Berlin and the Policeman Posted on 29 March 2014 Lesley Chamberlain Ignatieff 1998 p 31 Ignatieff 1998 pp 33 37 The Book of Isaiah Personal Impressions of Isaiah Berlin edited by Henry Hardy Boydell amp Brewer 2013 p 180 Cultural Diversity Liberal Pluralism and Schools Isaiah Berlin and Education Routledge 2006 Neil Burtonwood p 11 Dubnov A M 2012 Becoming a Russian Jew In Isaiah Berlin Palgrave Studies in Cultural and Intellectual History Palgrave Macmillan New York Bonavia Michael 1990 London Before I Forget The Self Publishing Association Ltd p 29 Ignatieff 1998 p 57 Sir Isaiah s modest Zionism Haaretz Exiles Memorial Center A Biography of Isaiah Berlin Hachey Thomas E Winter 1973 1974 American Profiles on Capitol Hill A Confidential Study for the British Foreign Office in 1943 PDF Wisconsin Magazine of History 57 2 141 153 JSTOR 4634869 Archived from the original PDF on 21 October 2013 London Gazette 1 January 1946 Brooks David 2 May 2014 Love Story The New York Times Lady Berlin obituary The Telegraph 26 August 2014 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 24 March 2021 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter B PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 16 June 2011 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved 1 August 2022 Ignatieff 1998 p 268 Founding Council The Rothermere American Institute Archived from the original on 17 November 2012 Retrieved 22 November 2012 Isaiah Berlin Building Letters 1960 1975 ed Henry Hardy and Mark Pottle London Chatto and Windus 2013 377 378 a b Hardy Henry 7 November 1997 Obituary Sir Isaiah Berlin The Independent Retrieved 7 March 2012 Berger Marilyn 10 November 1997 Isaiah Berlin Philosopher And Pluralist Is Dead at 88 The New York Times Retrieved 7 March 2012 Letter to Noel Annan quoted in Lloyd Jones p 53 a b c Ignatieff 1998 p 113 Warburton Nigel 2001 Two Concepts of Liberty Freedom An Introduction with Readings The Open University Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 21246 5 Isaiah Berlin s essay Two Concepts of Liberty is one of the most important pieces of post war political philosophy It was originally given as a lecture in Oxford in 1958 and has been much discussed since then In this extract from the lecture Berlin identifies the two different concepts of freedom negative and positive which provide the framework for his wide ranging discussion Two Concepts of Liberty berlin wolf ox ac uk Retrieved 31 December 2023 Kocis Robert 17 November 2023 Isaiah Berlin A Kantian and Post Idealist Thinker Political Philosophy Now University of Wales Press pp 71 95 ISBN 9781786838957 D Bleich 2006 The Materiality of Reading New Literary History 37 3 607 629 doi 10 1353 nlh 2006 0000 S2CID 144957435 Berlin Isaiah 1997 Hardy Henry Hausheer Roger eds The Proper Study of Mankind An Anthology of Essays Chatto and Windus pp 11 238 ISBN 0701165278 OCLC 443072603 Brown Alan 1986 Modern Political Philosophy Theories of the Just Society Middlesex Penguin Books pp 157 158 ISBN 0140225285 OCLC 14371928 Jahanbegloo Ramin 1992 Conversations with Isaiah Berlin Halban Publishers p 188 ISBN 1870015487 OCLC 26358922 Santos Goncalo 2021 Chinese Village Life Today Building Families in an Age of Transition Seattle University of Washington Press pp xiii ISBN 978 0 295 74738 5 Isaiah Berlin Two concepts of liberty Liberty Reader Routledge 2017 pp 33 57 online Michael C Behrent Liberal Dispositions Recent scholarship on French Liberalism Modern Intellectual History 13 2 2016 447 477 Steven J Heyman Positive and negative liberty Chicago Kent Law Review 68 1992 81 90 online Berlin Isaiah 2014 Personal Impressions Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691157702 via press princeton edu The Isaiah Berlin Day in Riga 2015 www fondsdots lv Isaiah Berlin Lectures Ben Gurion University of the Negev Rare correspondence between Sir Isaiah Berlin and David Ben Gurion on Who is a Jew donated to BGU in bgu ac il Isaiah Berlin Society St Paul s School The Age of Enlightenment PDF 2017 Retrieved 29 August 2017 Sources editIgnatieff Michael 1998 Isaiah Berlin A Life New York Metropolitan ISBN 0805063005 OCLC 42666274 Authorised biography Further reading editBooks edit Baum Bruce and Robert Nichols eds Isaiah Berlin and the Politics of Freedom Two Concepts of Liberty 50 Years Later Routledge 2013 Benhabib Seyla Exile Statelessness and Migration Playing Chess with History from Hannah Arendt to Isaiah Berlin Princeton University Press 2018 Blattberg Charles From Pluralist to Patriotic Politics Putting Practice First Oxford and New York Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 0198296886 A critique of Berlin s value pluralism Blattberg has also criticised Berlin for taking politics too seriously Brockliss Laurence and Ritchie Robertson eds Isaiah Berlin and the Enlightenment Oxford Oxford University Press 2016 Caute David Isaac and Isaiah The Covert Punishment of a Cold War Heretic Yale University Press 2013 Cherniss Joshua and Steven Smith eds The Cambridge Companion to Isaiah Berlin Cambridge University Press 2018 excerpt Crowder George Isaiah Berlin Liberty and Pluralism Cambridge Polity Press 2004 ISBN 0745624766 Crowder George The Problem of Value Pluralism Isaiah Berlin and Beyond Routledge 2019 Dubnov Arie M Isaiah Berlin The Journey of a Jewish Liberal Palgrave Macmillan 2012 Galipeau Claude Isaiah Berlin s Liberalism Oxford Clarendon Press 1994 ISBN 0198278683 Gray John Isaiah Berlin An Interpretation of His Thought Princeton University Press 1996 ISBN 069104824X Hardy Henry ed The Book of Isaiah Personal Impressions of Isaiah Berlin Archived 1 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine The Boydell Press 2009 Ignatieff Michael Isaiah Berlin A Life Chatto and Windus 1998 Lyons Johnny The Philosophy of Isaiah Berlin Bloomsbury Publishing 2020 excerpt Muller Jan Werner ed Isaiah Berlin s Cold War Liberalism Springer 2019 Walicki Andrzej Encounters with Isaiah Berlin Story of an Intellectual Friendship Peter Lang 2011 Tributes obituaries articles and profiles edit Sir Isaiah Berlin May He Rest in Peace A tribute to Isaiah Berlin amp A conversation with Isaiah Berlin on The Philosopher s Zone ABC 6 amp 13 June 2009 Isaiah Berlin and the history of ideas The Isaiah Berlin Virtual Library Wolfson College Oxford A podcast interview with Henry Hardy on Berlin s pluralism A recording of the last of Berlin s Mellon Lectures Wolfson College Oxford Biographical information on Sir Isaiah Berlin A section from the last essay written by Isaiah Berlin The New York Review of Books Vol XLV Number 8 1998 Ned O Gorman My dinners with Isaiah the music of a philosopher s life Sir Isaiah Berlin includes related article on Isaiah Berlin s commitment to ideals of genuine understanding over intellectual mastery Commonweal 14 August 1998 Tribute from the Chief Rabbi at his funeral Anecdote from Wolfson College s tribute page Hywel Williams An English liberal stooge Letter to Berlin from Tony Blair 23 October 1997 Assaf Inbari The Spectacles of Isaiah Berlin Azure Spring 2006 Obituary by Henry Hardy Joshua Cherniss Isaiah Berlin A Defence usurped in the Oxonian Review Joshua Cherniss Freedom and Philosophers usurped review of Freedom and its Betrayal in the Oxonian Review Isaiah Berlin Beyond the Wit Evan R Goldstein Berlin archive and author page from The New York Review of Books External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Isaiah Berlin External videos nbsp Booknotes interview with Michael Ignatieff on Isaiah Berlin A Life 24 January 1999 C SPANWebsite and bibliography of Isaiah Berlin s writings Full text of Concepts and Categories Archived 19 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Entry on Isaiah Berlin in the International Encyclopedia of Ethics Cherniss Joshua Hardy Henry Isaiah Berlin In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Bibliography at Wolfson College Bragg Melvyn War in the 20th Century In Our Time BBC Radio Four including a discussion with Michael Ignatieff biographer of the ideas of Berlin a year after the latter s death Sir Isaiah Berlin s Blue Plaque on Headington House Isaiah Berlin Day in Riga BroadcastsAcademic officesPreceded byG D H Cole Chichele Professor ofSocial and Political Theory1957 1967 Succeeded byJohn PlamenatzNew office President of Wolfson College Oxford1965 1975 Succeeded bySir Henry FisherProfessional and academic associationsPreceded byH D Lewis President of the Aristotelian Society1963 1964 Succeeded byW H WalshPreceded bySir Denys Page President of the British Academy1974 1978 Succeeded bySir Kenneth DoverAwardsPreceded byOctavio Paz Jerusalem Prize1979 Succeeded byGraham Greene Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Isaiah Berlin amp oldid 1203711306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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