The power of ideas
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The power of ideas
Princeton University Press, 2013
2nd ed
- : pbk
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Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The essays collected in this new volume reveal Isaiah Berlin at his most lucid and accessible. He was constitutionally incapable of writing with the opacity of the specialist, but these shorter, more introductory pieces provide the perfect starting-point for the reader new to his work. Those who are already familiar with his writing will also be grateful for this further addition to his collected essays. The connecting theme of these essays, as in the case of earlier volumes, is the crucial social and political role--past, present and future--of ideas, and of their progenitors. A rich variety of subject-matters is represented--from philosophy to education, from Russia to Israel, from Marxism to romanticism--so that the truth of Heine's warning is exemplified on a broad front. It is a warning that Berlin often referred to, and provides an answer to those who ask, as from time to time they do, why intellectual history matters. Among the contributions are "My Intellectual Path," Berlin's last essay, a retrospective autobiographical survey of his main preoccupations; and "Jewish Slavery and Emancipation," the classic statement of his Zionist views, long unavailable in print.
His other subjects include the Enlightenment, Giambattista Vico, Vissarion Belinsky, Alexander Herzen, G.V. Plekhanov, the Russian intelligentsia, the idea of liberty, political realism, nationalism, and historicism. The book exhibits the full range of his enormously wide expertise and demonstrates the striking and enormously engaging individuality, as well as the power, of his own ideas. "Over a hundred years ago, the German poet Heine warned the French not to underestimate the power of ideas: philosophical concepts nurtured in the stillness of a professor's study could destroy a civilization."--Isaiah Berlin, Two Concepts of Liberty, 1958. This new edition adds a number of previously uncollected pieces, including Berlin's earliest statement of the pluralism of values for which he is famous.
Table of Contents
Note on References xi Foreword by Avishai Margalit xiii Editor's Preface xxv My Intellectual Path 1 The Purpose of Philosophy 29 The Philosophers of the Enlightenment 43 One of the Boldest Innovators in the History of Human Thought 63 Russian Intellectual History 81 The Man Who Became a Myth 95 A Revolutionary without Fanaticism 106 The Role of the Intelligentsia 125 Liberty 134 The Philosophy of Karl Marx 139 The Father of Russian Marxism 153 Realism in Politics 163 The Origins of Israel 173 Jewish Slavery and Emancipation 197 Chaim Weizmann's Leadership 227 The Search for Status 238 The Essence of European Romanticism 243 Meinecke and Historicism 249 General Education 260 Appendix to the Second Edition Democracy, Communism and the Individual 273 Woodrow Wilson on Education 284 A Note on Nationalism 301 Index 313
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