
Sir Isaiah Berlin was a philosopher and historian of ideas, regarded as one of the leading liberal thinkers of the twentieth century. He excelled as an essayist, lecturer and conversationalist; and as a brilliant speaker who delivered, rapidly and spontaneously, richly allusive and coherently structured material, whether for a lecture series at Oxford University or as a broadcaster on the BBC Third Programme, usually without a script. Many of his essays and lectures were later collected in book form. Born in Riga, now capital of Latvia, then part of the Russian Empire, he was the first person of Jewish descent to be elected to a prize fellowship at All Souls College, Oxford. From 1957 to 1967, he was Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory at the University of Oxford. He was president of the Aristotelian Society from 1963 to 1964. In 1966, he helped to found Wolfson College, Oxford, and became its first President. He was knighted in 1957, and was awarded the Order of Merit in 1971. He was President of the British Academy from 1974 to 1978. He also received the 1979 Jerusalem Prize for his writings on individual freedom. Berlin's work on liberal theory has had a lasting influence. Berlin is best known for his essay Two Concepts of Liberty, delivered in 1958 as his inaugural lecture as Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory at Oxford. He defined negative liberty as the absence of constraints on, or interference with, agents' possible action. Greater "negative freedom" meant fewer restrictions on possible action. Berlin associated positive liberty with the idea of self-mastery, or the capacity to determine oneself, to be in control of one's destiny. While Berlin granted that both concepts of liberty represent valid human ideals, as a matter of history the positive concept of liberty has proven particularly susceptible to political abuse. Berlin contended that under the influence of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Immanuel Kant and G. W. F. Hegel (all committed to the positive concept of liberty), European political thinkers often equated liberty with forms of political discipline or constraint. This became politically dangerous when notions of positive liberty were, in the nineteenth century, used to defend nationalism, self-determination and the Communist idea of collective rational control over human destiny. Berlin argued that, following this line of thought, demands for freedom paradoxically become demands for forms of collective control and discipline – those deemed necessary for the "self-mastery" or self-determination of nations, classes, democratic communities, and even humanity as a whole. There is thus an elective affinity, for Berlin, between positive liberty and political totalitarianism. Conversely, negative liberty represents a different, perhaps safer, understanding of the concept of liberty. Its proponents (such as Jeremy Bentham and John Stuart Mill) insisted that constraint and discipline were the antithesis of liberty and so were (and are) less prone to confusing liberty and constraint in the manner of the philosophical harbingers of modern totalitarianism. It is this concept of Negative Liberty that Isaiah Berlin supported. It dominated heavily his early chapters in his third lecture. This negative liberty is central to the claim for toleration due to incommensurability. This concept is mirrored in the work of Joseph Raz. Berlin's espousal of negative liberty, his hatred of totalitarianism and his experience of Russia in the revolution and through his contact with the poet Anna Akhmatova made him an enemy of the Soviet Union and he was one of the leading public intellectuals in the ideological battle against Communism during the Cold War.
Series
Books

Conversations with Isaiah Berlin
1991

Karl Marx
His Life and Environment
1939

Freedom and Its Betrayal
Six Enemies of Human Liberty
1969

The Hedgehog and the Fox
An Essay on Tolstoy's View of History
1953

Vico and Herder
1948

The Proper Study of Mankind
1997

Personal Impressions
1980

Russian Thinkers
1978

Concepts and Categories
Philosophical Essays
1979

Liberty
1969

The Sense of Reality
1996

Enlightening
Letters 1946-1960
2009

The Soviet Mind
Russian Culture under Communism
2004

Three Critics of the Enlightenment
Vico, Hamann, Herder
2000

The Age of Enlightenment
The Eighteenth Century Philosophers
1956

Building
Letters, 1960-1975
2013

The First and the Last
1999

The Power of Ideas
2000

Against the Current
Essays in the History of Ideas
1979

Flourishing
Letters, 1928-1946
2004

Affirming
Letters, 1975-1997
2015

The Magus of the North
J.G. Hamann & the Origins of Modern Irrationalism
1993

Two Concepts of Liberty
1958

The Roots of Romanticism
1965

Political Ideas in the Romantic Age
Their Rise & Influence on Modern Thought
1997

The Crooked Timber of Humanity
Chapters in the History of Ideas
1990