Isaiah Berlin
1991, IndependentIsaiah Berlin (1909-97) was born to Russian-speaking Jewish parents in Riga. His father Mendel owned a timber business providing material to the Russian railways; he and his wife Marie were very cultured people. Their only child developed a passion for music. In 1915 the family moved St Petersburg, staying during the revolutions. The Russian Revolution was a period of great hope for the future but one that also opened up the risk of anti Semitism. So after the violence, the Berlins returned to the most beautiful street in Riga. Eventually they decided to move to Britain where Mendel had friends and business ties.
From 1921 the clever lad was educated at St Paul's School London, then at Oxford to study Classics. Isaiah was thrust into the excitement of 1930s Oxford, becoming part of the British intellectual establishment. Not bad for a foreigner who had once spoken Yiddish, German, Russian and Latvian at home, but had to learn English and French from scratch.
With war coming to Europe, Berlin welcomed a chance to work for the British Ministry of Information, firstly in Washington where his brilliant wartime dispatches were read by Churchill (1940-2). Then he became part of the British Foreign Office team that lived and worked in Moscow and in St Petersburg (1942-6).
Isaiah and Aline
Isaiah Berlin certainly did not live in an ivory tower; like many other academics, he became engaged in the outside world. Throughout his career, Berlin’s personality and contact skills saw him actively welcomed by a great range of politicians, businessmen and academics. Berlin did not like making enemies; he was uncomfortably aware of his dual allegiance when working for a British government which was unsympathetic to to Jewish dreams for a safe haven. But as a loyal Zionist, he was keen to play a role as a contact between his friend Chaim Weizmann and some American politicians, before the State of Israel was established. Only when David Ben Gurion asked him to move to Israel, to play a part in shaping the new state, did Berlin decline.
In 1950, Berlin returned to All Souls, where he became Chair of Social and Political Theory. He was often heard on the radio, the broadcasts and lectures now available in the Isaiah Berlin Virtual Library.
Berlin affirmed the importance of individual freedom. Yet he was clear that the ideals of liberty, equality and social justice inevitably conflicted and required negotiation. Even his liberal friends argued that individual freedom had to be limitless. Berlin had absorbed British values: 1. decency, 2. toleration of dissent and 3. Importance of liberty over efficiency. In his view, thinking society members had to embrace contradictory values. Britain's open political system had to be an embodiment of pluralism at its best.
When seeing so many important conflicts, Berlin felt there was much to be said for each side i.e his commitment to pluralism. If freedom, justice, equality, tolerance, loyalty and compassion and collided, they could be rightly sought after; but equality could be achieved by curtailing the liberty of some.
In 1956, middle-aged Berlin married Aline de Gunzbourg Halban (1915-2014). He had found the brilliant Paris-raised wife and stepsons who would be the centre of his life from then on. He was a director of Covent Garden, opera patron and trustee of the National Gallery. A grateful nation was pleased to see Berlin knighted in 1957.
The Berlin house at Oxford
This philosopher’s most important stance was that there could never be any single, universal, complete and demonstrable answer to the most moral qiestions of all: how should we live? Contrary to C18th French Enlightenment visions of an orderly synthesis of all objectives, Berlin showed there was a huge number of competing, irreconcilable ultimate values; humans had to make choices.
Pluralism meant every family and every society had to accept that there was never one absolute value to which other values had to be subordinated. There were many values in life that commanded respect, but what if freedom, justice, equality, tolerance, com[assion and loyalty collided? Berlin thought no amount of rational discussion could resolve these conflicting values. So his solution was not to give any one value absolute priority over the others. We have to resolve the tensions between values by keeping them in pragmatic balance. We have to accept trade-offs, even if people make choices that are less than 100% satisfactory.
by Michael Ignatieff, 1998
Conclusion
Ignatieff’s interviews captured one of Oxford's most popular professors, the most humane of modern philosophers. He was a historian of the Russian intelligentsia, biographer of Marx, pioneering scholar of the Romantic movement and defender of proper, positive English freedoms. Just as well for posterity that Ignatieff managed to question and tape Berlin for 10 productive years, before Berlin died. Then Ignatieff interviewed Berlin's widow, friends, students and colleagues.
3 comments:
Berlin’s life and philosophy remind us that true wisdom lies not in chasing perfect answers, but in learning to balance competing values with humility and humanity.
The interview tells the story of how the writings of one of the most engaging and humane minds of the twentieth century were made available to the public by one most gifted and committed editors of contemporary times. In other words, it's the tale of how Henry Hardy edited over twenty volumes of Isaiah Berlin's works including four volumes of letters. 1 minute 40.
A fine example of a life well-lived.
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