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  1. Isaiah Berlin notes that historically positive liberty has proven particularly susceptible to rhetorical abuse; especially from the 18th century onwards, it has either been paternalistically re-drawn from the third-person, or conflated with the concept of negative liberty and thus disguised underlying value-conflicts.

    • Isaiah Berlin
    • 1958
  2. 27 de fev. de 2003 · The idea of distinguishing between a negative and a positive sense of the term ‘liberty’ goes back at least to Kant, and was examined and defended in depth by Isaiah Berlin in the 1950s and ’60s. Discussions about positive and negative liberty normally take place within the context of political and social philosophy.

  3. Everything is what it is: liberty is liberty, not equality or fairness or justice or culture, or human happiness or a quiet conscience. If the liberty of myself or my class or nation depends on the misery of a number of other human beings, the system which promotes this is unjust and immoral.

  4. 26 de out. de 2004 · Isaiah Berlin (1909–97) was a naturalised British philosopher, historian of ideas, political theorist, educator, public intellectual and moralist, and essayist. He was renowned for his conversational brilliance, his defence of liberalism and pluralism, his opposition to political extremism and intellectual fanaticism, and his ...

  5. Em 1958 era publicado o ensaio “Dois conceitos de liberdade” (DCL), de Isaiah Berlin, originado de palestra proferida por ele na Higham Chichele Society. Em 1969, foi relançado com uma extensa introdução em um livro que reunia três outros ensaios. DCL viria a ser o trabalho de Berlin mais conhecido.

    • Ivo Coser
    • 2019
  6. Two Concepts of Liberty. Isaiah Berlins inaugural lecture as Oxford’s Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory, ’Two Concepts of Liberty’, has its proximate origins in the text of his Political Ideas in the Romantic Age (PIRA).

  7. Resumos. Este texto propõe-se a oferecer uma análise crítica da liberdade liberal tal como formulada por Isaiah Berlin, e entendida substancialmente como liberdade negativa. Tal entendimento da liberdade, em diversas de suas formulações, segue sendo hegemônico no debate contemporâneo sobre liberdade, direitos e suas circunstâncias.