Isaiah Berlin’s Critique of Enlightenment

Volume 3|Issue 12| Spring 2015 |Book Reviews

Abstract

Isaiah Berlin started his academic work as a philosopher in Oxford, and gained renown as a historian of ideas. He was clearly influenced in Oxford by Austin, Ayer, Hampshire, MacKinnon, and Macnabb, who instilled in him the English method of linguistic analysis derived from Hume, Mill, and Russell. Perhaps his article "Austin and the Early Beginnings of Oxford Philosophy" is the most prominent piece on this Oxford analytical movement.

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Professor of Modern and Contemporary Philosophy, Faculty of Arts, Tanta University, Egypt.  Author of many studies and research papers on philosophy of the Enlightenment in modern Western philosophy, with a research interest in Isaiah Berlin's critique of the Enlightenment.

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