Isaiah
Berlin & Why He Resonates With Me!
JAMES R. FISHER, JR., Ph.D.
© October 15, 2017
A READER WONDERS – About Isaiah Berlin’s “hedgehogs” & “foxes”
So, is a hedgehog like a broken record while a fox is like a cd on
random play?
In your opinion, did Isaiah Berlin succeed in getting his
essential message across? Was his genius in distilling his thinking, reducing
the complex to a single all encompassing truth, easily grasped by dolts? ☺
Marketing people and sales people understand this very well I
believe. People like brief explanations... or rather, they drift off if they
are required to absorb long drawn out explanations. We lose them when we cannot
"get to the point". Some engineers I know are like that. VP's too.😀
Regards,
DR.
FISHER RESPONDS:
Isaiah
Berlin was just the opposite of what you construe as essential to success in
business or any other enterprise.
Moreover,
he didn't think the complex could be reduced to a simple universal truth, but
quite the opposite. In fact, he believed that conflict existed between
"liberty, fraternity and equality," and that painful choices had to
be made. In other words, one or more of these attributes would
necessarily have to be sacrificed or diminished at the expense of the others.
For example, in order to realize some semblance of equality freedom could not
but be diminished.
That
is one reason why social justice is easy to formulate and so difficult if not
impossible to implement. Idealists are not willing to recognize
much less accept this reality.
If
you attempt to carry the burden of someone else, in most cases, you weaken them
and their resolve. The American nation, after 72 years of weakening such
resolve since WWII, now wrestles with the consequences of that policy and
philosophy.
My
writing is all about conflict, but managed conflict. It is also about
exalting the individual to be his own man and all that he can be. It
is not about carrying another man's water but energizing man to realize the
freedom and satisfaction that is derived when he accepts that burden,
himself.
Long
before I ever read Berlin, I was weary of absolutes or of simplistic or
universal approaches to truth, which I realized much as Berlin did that your
truth is not my truth and my truth is not your truth.
Berlin
has had an amazing impact on Western society while being much less of a
philosopher than an advocate of the plurality of approaches to life. Long
before I ever knew he existed, I understood that it was more important to
understand an organization's culture than the selective views of its
personnel. A plurality of cultures exists in one's neighborhood why are
we so surprised when we find that it exists as well in ethnic groups and
nations, or indeed, in different functional groups within an organization?
As
a chemical sales engineer, I never sold as a cognitive engineer while my friend
William L. Livingston III has always been so inclined. There is room for
a diversity of approaches to life. I'm just profiling mine for whatever
it is worth to my readers.
PS
What you describe is true. Media and advertisers have been successful in
reinforcing the attention deficit disorder common to our times. They
successfully exploit the "herd mentality," which is now quite in
vogue. It has less sustaining power than one might think for eventually
people even become bored with being bored. We see this in automobiles
commercials on television for the umpteenth time. We are approaching WORK
WITHOUT WORKERS. but already, we have been anesthetized to making
purchases on automatic pilot as part of the herd mentality.
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