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![]() Saturday, November 8, 1997 Published at 01:39 GMT ![]() ![]() ![]() UK ![]() Philosopher and political thinker Sir Isaiah Berlin dies ![]()
The philosopher and historian of ideas Sir Isaiah Berlin died in Oxford on
Wednesday aged 88.
Thought by many to be the dominant scholar
of his generation, the death of Sir Isaiah, an extraordinary, life-loving man with a mind like an
encyclopaedia, leaves a hole in the intellectual life of Britain impossible
to fill.
"A fox" intrigued by many ideas
In 1953 Isaiah Berlin published a book called The Hedgehog and the Fox. Foxes, he wrote, are people who know many things; hedgehogs know one big
thing.
It was in part a study of Berlin's literary hero, Tolstoy, whom he
described as a fox who wished at times that he was a hedgehog.
Isaiah Berlin
was perhaps also a fox, intrigued by many ideas, unendingly curious,
open-minded and pleading above all for tolerance.
Advocate of tolerance and pluralism
He was born into a Jewish family in 1909 in the Latvian capital Riga.
Witnessing a man being overpowered by police and dragged away during the
Russian Revolution made him a convinced anti-Communist, although he was never
strident in any of his criticisms.
When he was 10 the family came to Britain which, he believed, was the best country for him.
"I think on the whole, so to speak, people are more tolerant. And if liberal
civilisation is what we're in favour of, then I think of the great countries of
the world, I think, perhaps, it comes top of that," he once said.
Opponent of absolutisms
In lectures, essays and broadcasts, he argued for a greater understanding of the essential values of liberal civilisation -
pluralism and liberty.
He was afraid of, and intellectually opposed to, absolutisms of any kind, and particularly the main intellectual absolutism of the 20th century, Marxism-Leninism.
The problem with absolute values, he argued, is
that they often conflict. Complete freedom and complete
equality were incompatible.
"Complete equality means people above other people have to be kept down in order
to promote chances for everybody. The two things (complete freedom and complete
equality) can't be had together but are both perfectly noble ultimate ends. And
one has to choose in the end," he argued.
"Now the idea that all values -- not all, but some
values are incompatible, leads to the idea that utopias are intrinsically
unattainable, not merely in practice but even in concept."
Isaiah Berlin went to school in London and to unversity at Oxford. The
family spoke English at home but he read his way through his father's library
of Russian literature, and later was to lecture in a number of languages.
During World War II he served in the British Embassy in Washington
providing, Winston Churchill with a weekly summary of American opinion which was
said to be Churchill's favourite reading.
After the war he was seconded to the
embassy in Moscow where he met the poet and novelist Boris Pasternak and the
poet Anna Akhmatova. This meeting became the subject of one of his most moving
and memorable essays in a selection called Personal Impressions.
Queues to hear his lectures
He had professorships at Harvard and Oxford, honorary doctorates at
universities all over Britain; he wrote books and essays on the ideas behind
politics and philosophy - a short work on Marx published in 1939 is still one
of the most readable there is on the subject; and he gave public lectures that
people queued to attend.
He spoke at incredible speed because, some said, his
mind worked so fast. He himself put it down to nerves, maintaining that all he
wanted was to get to the end as quickly as he could.
He insisted it should
be possible to express any idea, no matter how complex, in simple terms and
direct language.
"He radiated life"
Professor Jerry Cohen, the current Chichele Professor of Social and
Political Theory at Oxford University, a position which Sir Isaiah himself held
for many years, remembers Isaiah Berlin as a man who was more alive than any
human being he has ever known.
"He loved life. He radiated life out from himself. He was the most effervescent
person one could ever know," Professor Cohen told BBC radio. "He was always bubbling and everybody around him
couldn't but rejoice in that. There was nobody who disliked him. They couldn't."
"Pluralism of values" legacy
As for his intellectual legacy, Dr Samuel Guttenplan of
Birkbeck College in London returns to the theme of pluralism. "He often said to me and many other people that, unlike other philosophers, he
had no disciples. Nor did he want them. And I think what he meant in part by
that was that there was no body of doctrine that could be specifically
associated with his name," Dr Guttenplan told the BBC.
"But of course this was the usual kind of modesty,
humility that Isaiah often expressed. And in fact, especially in the last 10 years, people have come to realise that although there was no particular
doctrine, what he stood for -- the pluralism of values and the need to
recognise the tolerance that goes with pluralism, and the particular way in
which the pluralism of values is represented in our society and ought to be
represented in more societies -- I think that will come to be seen as a major
contribution."
Lover of music
Isaiah Berlin loved music. In a radio interview two years ago he said
that at his funeral he wanted his friend, the pianist Alfred Brendel, to play
the andantino from Schubert's piano sonata in A. Then he quickly checked
himself.
"He's a great friend," he said. "I'd rather not put it on him (ie give
him such a painful task). No, no. No, no. I'd rather not die."
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