Editorial Pimlico
Fecha de edición febrero 2003
Idioma inglés
EAN 9780712668422
208 páginas
Libro
encuadernado en tapa blanda
Isaiah Berlin's celebrated radio lectures on six formative anti-liberal thinkers were delivered on the BBC's Third Programme in 1952. They are published here for the first time, fifty years on. Freedom and its Betrayal?< is one of Isaiah Berlin's earliest and most convincing expositions of his views on human freedom and the history of ideas, views which later found expression in such famous works as 'Two Concepts of Liberty', and were at the heart of his lifelong work on the Enlightenment and its critics.
In his lucid examinations of sometimes difficult ideas Berlin demonstrates that a balanced understanding and a resilient defence of human liberty depend on learning both from the errors of freedom's alleged defenders and from the dark insights of its avowed antagonists. This book throws light on the early development of Berlin's ideas, and supplements his already published writings with fuller treatments of Helvétius, Rousseau, Fichte, Hegel and Saint-Simon, with the ultra-conservative traditionalist Maistre bringing up the rear.
Freedom and its Betrayal shows Berlin at his liveliest and most torrentially spontaneous, testifying to his talents as a teacher of rare brilliance and impact. Listeners tuned in expectantly each week to the broadcasts and found themselves mesmerised by Berlin's astonishingly fluent extempore style. A leading historian of ideas, who was then a schoolboy, records that the lectures 'excited me so much that I sat, for every talk, on the floor beside the wireless, taking notes'. This excitement is at last recreated here for all to share.
Isaiah Berlin (Riga, 1909 x{0026} x02013; Oxford, 1997) fue uno de los principales pensadores del siglo xx. A los seis años se trasladó con su familia a Petrogrado (actual San Petersburgo), donde vivió la revolución bolchevique. En 1921 emigró a Inglaterra. Estudió en la Universidad de Oxford, donde fue fellow del All Souls College y del New College, así como profesor de Teoría Social y Política, y fundó el Wolfson College. Diplomático en Washington y Moscú en 1941 y 1942, también presidió la Academia Británica de 1974 a 1978. Sus logros en el campo de la historia de las ideas le hicieron acreedor de los premios Erasmus, Lippincott, Agnelli y Jerusalén. Entre sus numerosos libros destacan Karl Marx, Pensadores rusos, Conceptos y categorías, Contra la corriente, Impresiones personales, El sentido de la realidad, El estudio adecuado de la humanidad, Las raíces del romanticismo, El poder de las ideas, Sobre la libertad y El erizo y el zorro.
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