Isaiah Berlin
John Gray
197 pages, Paperback
ISBN: 069104824X
ISBN13:
Language: English
Publish: 872838000000
In 1921, at the age of eleven, Isaiah Berlin arrived in England from Riga, Latvia. By the time he was thirty he was at the heart of British intellectual life. He has remained its commanding presence ever since, and few would dispute that he was one of Britain’s greatest thinkers. His reputation extends worldwide–as a great conversationalist, intellectual historian, and man of letters. He has been called the century’s most inspired reader.
Yet Berlin’s contributions to thought–in particular to moral and political philosophy, and to liberal theory–are little understood, and surprisingly neglected by the academic world. In this book, they are shown to be animated by a single, powerful, subversive value-pluralism which affirms the reality of a deep conflict between ultimate human values that reason cannot resolve. Though bracingly clear-headed, humane and realist, Berlin’s value-pluralism runs against the dominant Western traditions, secular and religious, which avow an ultimate harmony of values. It supports a highly distinctive restatement of liberalism in Berlin’s work–an agnostic liberalism, which is founded not on rational choice but on the radical choices we make when faced with intractable dilemmas. It is this new statement of liberalism, the central subject of John Gray’s lively and lucid book, which gives the liberal intellectual tradition a new lease on life, a new source of life, and which comprises Berlin’s central and enduring legacy.