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The Proper Study of Mankind

Page 91

by Isaiah Berlin

Maurists, 330

  Mayakovsky, Vladimir Vladimirovich, 531–3, 549

  Mazarin, Jules, Cardinal, 337

  Mazzei, Lapo, 301

  Mazzini, Giuseppe, 398, 402, 501, 514, 600, 617

  Meinecke, Friedrich: on Machiavelli, 276, 278, 282, 322, 325; on Voltaire, 337; on historism, 427n

  Mencke, J. B., 365

  Mendelssohn, Moses, 404

  Merezhkovsky, Dmitry Sergeevich, 441

  metaphor: in political philosophy, 75–6; in historical discourse, 131; Vico on, 344–5; in Bible, 404

  metaphysics: and history, 182

  Meyerhold, Vsevolod Emilievich, 525

  Meysenbug, Malwilda von, 517

  Michaelis, Johann David, 365

  Michelet, Jules: historical viewpoint, 120, 159; restores Vico, 248; and national achievements, 398, 591; friendship with Herzen, 501, 515; view of Russians, 514

  Mickewicz, Adam, 546

  Mikhailov, Mikhail Larionovich, 444n

  Mikhailovsky, Nikolai Konstantinovich, 523

  Milbanke, Annabella (later Lady Byron), 572n

  Mill, John Stuart: doctrines, ix, 88–9; achievements, 73; and social pressures, 95; and free will, 100; on personal freedom and compulsion, 196, 198–200, 211, 221, 232–3, 236; private and social life, 226; on deprivation of human rights, 229; on self-assertion, 231; on government by the people, 234; and experiments in living, 240; on Bentham, 318; on lifelessness of modern man, 395; on Herder’s influence, 417; Tolstoy on, 469; Herzen meets, 516; shocked by Comte’s freedom of opinion in morals, 554; wariness of rationalism, 583; Auguste Comte and Positivism, 222n; On Liberty, ix, 199n

  Millar, John, 363

  Milton, John, 350, 362, 389, 573

  mimesis, 559

  Modigliani, Amedeo, 541, 543

  Moleschott, J., 493

  Molière, Jean Baptiste Poquelin de, 330, 437

  Momigliano, Arnaldo, 9, 390n

  Mondrian, Piet, 532

  Monge, Gaspard, 489

  monism, xxviii–xxix, xxxi–xxxii, 66, 69, 241, 312–13, 322, 553–5, 568

  Monod, Gabriel-Jean-Jacques, 37

  Montaigne, Michel Eyquem, seigneur de: on universal truths, 244; and cultural history, 351, 353; scepticism over progress, 408; and pluralism, 425; as ‘fox’, 437; and historical study, 361

  Montesquieu, Charles Louis de Secondat, baron de: and spirit of the laws, 53, 363; materialist view of history, 182, 339, 351, 353; on political liberty, 219; on variety of values, 244, 248, 362, 380; accepts rational method, 262; and climate, 384; categorisations, 392–3; and historical judgement, 407; ethical relativism, 428; influence on Catherine the Great, 445; belief in absolute principles, 556; De l’esprit des lois, 380n, 487n

  morality: and ideal, 5, 11; and judgement, 135–6, 156–7, 179, 188–90; and specialised knowledge, 223; Kant on compatibility with determinism, 258–9, 561; and human ends, 315

  More, Sir Thomas, 313, 357

  Morelli, Giovanni di Pagolo, 301

  Morelly, 557

  Moritz, Carl Philipp, 564

  Morley, John, Viscount, 612

  Morris, William, 398, 557

  Mortier, Marshal Adolphe Edouard

  Casimir Joseph, due de Trévise, 501

  Moscherosch, Johann Michael, 365

  Moser, Friedrich Karl von, 363, 395, 398; Von dem deutschen Nationalgeist, 395n

  Möser, Justus: anti-rationalism, 251, 394; on cultural variety, 256–7, 363–4, 368; historical view, 355; on traditions, 373; on German depression, 375; and Herder, 393

  Moses: Machiavelli and, 281, 288, 295, 300, 307, 309; Herder and, 399; Tolstoy and, 494; personality, 634

  Mosheim, Johann Lorenz von, 365

  Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus: The Magic Flute, 225

  Muhammad the Prophet, 141, 573

  Müller, Adam, 263

  Muralt, Beat Ludwig von, 355, 362–3

  Muralt, Leonard von, 273

  Muslims: and revealed truth, 4

  Musset, Alfred de, 574

  Mussolini, Benito, 189n, 614

  Mussorgsky, Modest Petrovich, 402

  mysticism, 328

  myths: as vision of world, 247; Fontenelle rejects, 344n; Vico on, 344, 348–9, 351n; Voltaire dismisses, 344, 346, 348, 351n; Herder on, 411

  Namier, Lewis B., 53, 56, 146

  Napoleon I (Bonaparte), Emperor of the French: historical importance, 169; achievements, 183; massacres, 187; imposes force, 222; authoritarianism, 305; victories in Germany, 371; Tolstoy on, 450, 452–5, 457, 462, 474, 486, 491, 496

  nation: and identity, xxxii–xxxiii, 590–4; as term, 131n

  nationalism, 581–603; Herder and, xxxi, 197–9, 371–8, 384, 401; rise of, 558–9, 567, 574, 585–6, 589, 593–4, 598–9; as conscious doctrine, 586–9, 591; defined, 590–1; and loyalty, 592; and relativism, 593; and injured pride, 594–5, 597–9, 602; and unifying image, 595–6; spread of, 599–601, 604; and group consciousness, 600–1; ideology of, 602–4; Europocentrism, 603–4; see also State, the

  National Socialism, xxxi

  natural law: and obedience, 78, 204, 208; and historical inevitability, 134; in Enlightenment thinking, 244–6, 264; unmentioned by Machiavelli, 280; and human ideals, 322; Vico denies, 350; empirical rules, 559

  natural science: influence, xxv; history as, xxviii, 17–58, 133, 331–2; and general laws, 28–30, 40, 45, 55–6; models in, 30, 35, 39; reasoning in, 31, 41–2, 45, 62; and answering questions, 60–2; progress of, 73, 326, 582–3; supplants theology and metaphysics, 80; and moral judgement, 188–9; divorce from humanities, 326–58; and single reality, 326–8; Vico opposes, 334; Herder’s attitude to, 360–1, 364, 433

  nature: controllability, 217; wildness of, 252, 257; Schelling on, as living organism, 261; harmony in, 264, 313, 562; limited human understanding of, 342; Leibniz on, 364; Herder on, 389, 393; human adaptation of, 558; romantic resistance to, 564–6

  Navalikhin, S., 440n

  Nazariev, V. N., 446

  Nekrasov, Nikolay Alekseevich, 533, 551

  neoclassicism, 559

  Neoplatonism, 183, 382n, 393

  Nerva, Roman Emperor, 287

  Nerval, Gérard de, 577

  Neuhaus, G. G., 532, 536–7

  New Deal (USA), xxxv, 629

  Newton, Isaac: general scientific laws, 19, 36; achievements, 20, 21n, 26, 79, 133, 167; general outlook, 51; Blake attacks, 259–60, 573; and unified reality, 328

  Nicholas I, Tsar, 479, 503, 511, 513, 515n

  Nicholas II, Tsar, 614

  Niebuhr, Barthold Georg, 355

  Nietzsche, Friedrich: doctrines, xii; and creative spirit, 72; and human relationships, 75; and destructive forces, 138; on cosmic purposelessness, 263, 577, 579; and Machiavelli, 292, 316; anti-rationalism, 328; hatred of State, 377; personality, 424n; as ‘hedgehog’, 437; and Maistre, 473; and Malwilda von Meysenbug, 517

  nihilists, 521

  Nijinsky, Vatslav Fomich, 530

  Nisbet, H. B., 361n, 391n, 414n

  nomothetic sociology, 186

  Norov, A. S., 440n

  Novalis (pseudonym of F. L. von Hardenberg), 263, 371, 575

  novels: and scientific writing, 167–8

  Nowell-Smith, Patrick H., 100, 141n

  Numa, 281

  Oakeshott, Michael, xiii

  obedience: rationale of, 64–5, 71, 78, 193, 207–8, 221; in children, 218, 220; in ignorant, 221

  objective pluralism see pluralism

  observation: of data, 60, 62, 73

  Occam, William, 200, 201n, 384

  occultism, 328

  Odoevsky, Prince Aleksandr Ivanovich, 550

  Oenamaus, 99n

  Ogareva, Nataliya, 517

  Ogarev, Nikolay Platonovich, 503–5, 511, 513, 517

  Oliverotto da Fermo, 296, 300, 319

  Olschki, Leonardo, 273

  oppression see coercion

  optimism, 136, 154

  Origen, 165n

  original sin, 69, 264, 492, 556

  Orsini, Felice
, 514

  Orwell, George, 316, 585

  Ossian (pseudonym of James Macpherson), 363, 386, 388, 395n

  Owen, Robert, 137, 512, 516, 557

  Paine, Thomas, 198

  palaeontology: extrapolation in, 25

  Palmieri, Matteo, 317

  Paolucci, Henry, 318n

  Pareto, Vilfredo, 182, 317, 435

  Paris: 1848 revolution, 506, 508–9, 515; Herzen in, 506, 508, 523

  Parnell, Charles Stewart, 632

  Pascal, Blaise: on society as organism, 364; as ‘hedgehog’, 437; on knowledge, 496; and scientific truths, 577

  Pascal, Roy, 395n, 521n

  Pasquier, Etienne, 333

  Pasternak, Boris Leonidovich: post-war status, 526–7; I. Berlin meets, 527–31, 533, 536–8, 552; eloquence, 530; patriotism, 532–3, 536; Akhmatova on, 533, 534n, 535–6, 546, 549–50; conversation with Stalin, 533–4, 551; disavows Communist Party, 535; The Childhood of Lüvers, 529; Dr Zhivago, 423, 529, 533, 536–8, 550; On Early Trains, 535–6

  Pasternak, Leonid Borisovich, 527

  Pasternak, Zinaida (Boris’s wife), 527, 532, 537–8, 549–50

  Pasteur, Louis, 163

  paternalism, 208, 228, 395

  patriotism: and German romantics, 371, 377, 403; Herder and, 371–2; and nationalism, 589

  Patrizi, Francesco, 305n, 331

  Paulucci, General Filipp Osipovich, marquis, 450, 474, 486, 489

  Peacock, Thomas Love, 607

  Pears, David F. (ed.): Freedom and the Will, 105n

  Pellico, Silvio: Le mie prigioni, 512

  Percy, Thomas, 389

  Pericles, 289, 299, 307, 322, 634

  Perisev, V. N., 441n

  Pertinax, 306

  Pétain, Marshal Philippe, 621

  Peter I (the Great), Tsar, 3, 265, 505, 518, 598

  Pevsner, A., 525

  Pfuel, General Ernst von, 450, 486, 489

  Philip of Macedon, 296, 302, 321n

  philosophes: aim for empiricism in moral philosophy, 79; on morality, 223; and future perfection, 241; see also Enlightenment, French

  philosophy: status and nature of, 62–3; doctrincs, 86–8; and politics, 192–3

  physics: and purposelessness, xxvi; as model, 35

  Picasso, Pablo, 532

  Pico della Mirandola, Giovanni, 281, 320, 562

  pietism, 248

  Pisarev, Dmitry Ivanovich, 469

  Pisistratus, 287–8, 296

  Plato: and world picture, xxvi; on rule by élite, 4; influence, 9; and objectivity in ethics and aesthetics, 64; and obedience, 72; political philosophy, 86–8; and causation theory, 99; and moral freedom, 110; on Sophocles, 210; and abandonment of final harmony, 238; on uniform reality, 248, 312–13, 326–7, 392, 555; views of, 269; on wicked, 270; on human ends, 314, 431; revolutionary thinking, 315; on political power, 319; on mathematics, 341; on good and evil, 392; Herder on, 405; as ‘hedgehog’, 437; and ideal city, 557, 568; and will to power, 577; and social group, 586

  Platonic ideal, 5, 557

  Platonists, 69, 178, 204

  Plekhanov, Georgy Valentinovich, 21, 155

  pluralism: I. Berlin’s belief in, xii, xxxii, xxxiv–xxxv; objective, xxv, xxxii, xxxv, 390n; Herder’s idea of, xxx, 361, 368, 398–401, 403–12, 415–17, 424–32, 567–8; and social values, xxxi, 7–10, 68, 242; defined, 9; and negative liberty, 241; Machiavelli and, 316–17, 320–4; and romantic movement, 559–60

  Plutarch, 331

  Pobedonostsev, Konstantin Petrovich, 483

  poetry: as vision of world, 247, 251; Herder on, 421–2

  Poggio Bracciolini, Gian Francesco, 281

  Pogodin, Mikhail Petrovich, 469

  Pokrovsky, K. V., 457n, 478n

  Pol Pot, 13

  Poland, 363, 523, 600

  Pole, Reginald, Cardinal, 270, 279

  Pole Star, The (periodical), 511

  polis, 297–8, 372, 398

  political philosophy: as ethics, 1; and human purpose, 66–70

  political theory: question of existence, 59–90; concerns, 74; and philosophical ideas, 192

  Polybius, 309, 351, 586

  Pontano, Giovanni (or Jovianus Pontanus), 282, 317, 425

  Popper, Karl: denounces Plato’s political philosophy, 87; on self-knowledge, 105–6; on ‘essentialism’, 125n, 281; criticises metaphysical historicism, 126n; and Machiavelli, 278, 281; The Open Society and its Enemies, 126n; The Poverty of Historicism, 126n

  populism: Herder’s doctrine of, 361, 367, 370–80, 399–403, 414, 417; rise of, 567

  Posidonius, 116

  positivists, 69, 328; see also Comte, Auguste

  Poulet, M. de, 443n

  power: and oppression, 234

  praise and blame, xxviii, 127–8, 135–6, 140, 141n, 146–7, 156, 159–60, 171, 175, 177; see also morality

  predictability, 101, 104–7, 109, 116

  Preen, Friedrich von, 380n

  Prezzolini, Giuseppe, 271, 285n, 289n, 292, 321n, 323n

  Priam, King of Troy, 92

  privacy, 201

  progress: and ideal, 6; Herzen on, 13; Vico on, 348, 351; Herder on, 378, 407–10, 428, 429; and natural sciences, 582

  Prometheus, 560

  Protagoras, 244

  Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, 289n

  Proudhon, Pierre Joseph: anarchism, 398; Tolstoy visits, 482n; Herzen and, 506–7, 510, 515, 517; La Guerre et la Paix, 471

  Proust, Marcel, 167, 437, 530–1, 550, 614

  Prussia, 249, 366, 566; see also Germany

  psychology: as natural science, 19–20, 61, 63

  Ptolemy, 35

  Publilius Syrus, 319n

  Pudovkin, Vsevolod Illarionovich, 525

  Pufendorf, Samuel, Baron von, 338, 365

  purpose (human), 66–72, 84, 92, 129–30

  Pushkin, Alexander S., 196, 437, 531–2, 546, 550–1

  Pyat, Félix, 515

  Pyatkovsky, A. P., 440n

  Pythagoras, 341, 555

  questions: answering, 60–7, 79; legitimacy of, 62

  quietism, 211n, 212n

  Racine, Jean, 8, 167, 330, 350, 363

  Rainborow, Thomas, 227n

  raison d’état, 299, 308, 310–11, 319

  Ramat, Raffaello, 275, 286

  Ranke, Leopold von, 54n, 120, 163, 274, 431

  rationalism and reason: I. Berlin’s attitude to, xiii–xiv, xxv, xxxi, xxxiii; Herder attacks, xxxi, 360; and reorganisation of society, 4–6, 213–18, 220; and answering questions, 60–1; and understanding, 89, 104; and human freedom, 93, 213–16, 218–19, 225n, 577–8; and human behaviour, 103–4; and Enlightenment doctrines, 244; opposed by anti-Enlightenment thinkers, 249–51, 256–8, 261–6; Machiavelli on, 313; and human ends, 314; and scientific method, 327, 334; and unified reality, 328

  Read, Herbert, 529; English Prose Style, 605n

  reason see rationalism and reason

  recognition: human need for, 227–31

  Reformation: Machiavelli and, 292; and mystical movements, 328; and beginnings of diversity, 554

  Reimarus, Hermann Samuel, 359

  relativism: cultural, 9–10; in political theory, 64; and inevitability, 171; and collapse of ideals, 179–80; opposition to Enlightenment, 243, 248; Herder advocates, 255, 390, 407n, 427–9; Vico propounds, 351; and differing objectives, 425; and nationalism, 593

  Religious Maxims … from … Machiavelli, 272

  Remus, 307

  Renaissance: art in, 8; cultural individuality, 50; on nature as divine harmony, 562

  Renan, Ernest, 21, 37

  Renaudet, Augustin, 273–4

  responsibility: and choice, 95–6, 108, 145–6, 156; and determinism, 99, 135, 140–5, 149–61, 182; seen as delusion, 179

  revolution of 1848, 506, 508–9, 515

  Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 261, 571

  Ricci, Luigi, 271

  Richelieu, Cardinal Jean Armand du Plessis, duc de, 22, 50

  Ridolfi, Roberto, 272–4, 321n

&nbs
p; rights, 64, 201, 236

  Rilke, Rainer Maria, 531, 550, 614

  rites: Vico on, 344, 346–7

  Ritter, Gerhard, 302, 432

  Robertson, William, 406

  Robespierre, Maximilien, 51, 169, 192, 267

  Roerich, Nicholas, 532

  Rolland, Romain, 517, 547

  Roman Catholic Church: and rational language, 330; and Western decadence, 481; historicism, 608

  romanticism: and human purpose, 70, 579–80; anti-rationality, 251, 256–7, 577–9; self-expression, 261; and creativity, 262; anti-authoritarianism, 264; German beginnings, 559–65, 569–76, 579, 598

  Rome (ancient): and personal constraints, 211; Machiavelli on, 287–9, 291, 300, 303, 307, 312, 322–3; Plutarch on, 331; achievements, 336; and Athenian law, 354; Herder on, 374–5, 433; Maistre on, 485

  Romulus, 288, 295, 300, 307, 309

  Roosevelt, Eleanor, 636

  Roosevelt, Franklin Delano: political achievements, xii, xxxv, 629–30, 632, 635–6; personality and qualities, xiv, 615, 628–36; relations with Churchill, 613–17, 619, 621–2, 624–6; illness, 636

  Rossetti, Christina, 545

  Rossini, Gioacchino Antonio, 402

  Rothschild, James, 506, 516n

  Rouché, Max, 361n, 397n, 407n, 427

  Rousseau, Jean-Jacques: on true freedom, x, 210; ideals, 3, 73; influence on French Revolution, 46; rejects Hobbes’s political obligation, 80–1; Babbitt denounces, 87; on cultural inhibitions and innocence, 114; Heine attacks ideas, 192; on ill will, 195; on obedience to law, 208; influence on liberal humanism, 210; on rationalism in society, 216, 219, 366, 394, 558; on universality of self-direction, 223; on austerity of laws of liberty, 233; Constant opposes, 235; on corrupting effect of civilisation, 245, 327, 566; pleads for natural feeling, 252, 558; on will, 259; accepts rational method, 262; demands revolutionary change, 264; Faguet ridicules, 266, 519; Maistre denounces, 266, 484; views of, 269; and Machiavelli, 271, 292; revolutionary thinking, 315; letter to Poles, 363; denounces stage, 366; doctrines, 367; on State, 377; and social units, 380; praises primitive societies, 389; and populism, 401; personality, 424n; and plurality of values, 425; on man’s imperfectibility, 430; Tolstoy and, 445, 455, 468–9, 472; on knowledge, 496; idealises independence and freedom, 561–2, 566; on people as organic whole, 591; Discourses, 366, 395; Émile, 195n, 259, 264, 468; Social Contract, 208n

  Royal Society of London, 330

  Rubens, Peter Paul, 547

  Rubinshtein, M. M., 441n, 445n

  rules (socio-political), 64, 78

  Ruskin, John, 395, 398, 583

  Russell, Bertrand Arthur William: in linguistic analytical tradition, ix; and human purpose, 67; and empirical knowledge, 82; and free will, 100, 141n; on uniform reality, 248; on Machiavelli, 279; talking, 530; attacks Victorian metaphysicians, 605

 

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