Ebooks
Histoire
Francis Fukuyama and the End of History
136
pages
English
Ebooks
2022
Reacting against both the British Idealists and the logical positivists, Isaiah Berlin forged a new philosophy best described as post-Idealist. This philosophy was deeply informed by Kantian categories and methods, and conditioned by Vichian themes of historical and cultural variation. An advocate of pluralism without relativism, Berlin believed that it was possible to adopt and live by values, but he could not achieve moral certainty that our values are objectively preferable to all others. Like Collingwood and Oakeshott (and some neo-Kantians), Berlin believed that concepts matter and that they have a history; that human values are numerous and incommensurable; that rationalism in politics is dangerous; and that positivists’ hopes for rigorous social sciences are unrealistic. Interestingly, Collingwood and Oakeshott, both also candidates for post-Idealism, shared Berlin’s commitment to these themes. Ultimately, Berlin’s ‘Two Concepts of Liberty’ is perhaps best perceived as a critique of Bradley’s Ethical Studies.IntroductionChapter 1: The British IdealistsChapter 2: Collingwood & Oakeshott: Post-Idealists?Chapter 3: Concepts Matter: ‘Two Concepts of Liberty’ and F. H. BradleyChapter 4: Berlin and the History of ConceptsChapter 5: Berlin and Cultural Pluralism1Chapter 6: Berlin vs. RationalismChapter 7: Berlin’s Philosophy of the Social SciencesChapter 8: Critical Appraisals
01 août 2022
9781786838971
English