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In The Roots of Romanticism, one of the twentieth century's most influential philosophers dissects and assesses a movement that changed the course of history. Brilliant, fresh, immediate, and eloquent, these celebrated Mellon Lectures are a bravura intellectual performance. Isaiah Berlin surveys the many attempts to define romanticism, distills its essence, traces its developments from its first stirrings to its apotheosis, and shows how it still permeates our outlook. He ranges over a cast of some of the greatest thinkers and artists of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, including Kant, Rousseau, Diderot, Schiller, the Schlegels, Novalis, Goethe, Blake, Byron, and Beethoven. The ideas and attitudes of these and other figures, Berlin argues, helped to shape twentieth-century nationalism, existentialism, democracy, totalitarianism, and our ideas about heroic individuals, self-fulfillment, and the exalted place of art.
This new edition, illustrated for the first time, also features a new foreword by philosopher John Gray, in which he discusses Berlin's belief that the influence of romanticism has been unpredictable and contradictory in the extreme, fuelling anti-liberal political movements but also reinvigorating liberalism; a revised text; and a new appendix that includes some of Berlin's correspondence about the lectures and the reactions to them.
239 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1965
1. All genuine questions can be answered.In the author's presentation, the Romantics begin with Hamann, who found this attempt to delineate, measure, and order all things completely absurd. The simple truth, no matter how a burgeoning European optimistic consensus sought to surmount it, is that God cannot be limited by human reason and rationality; and it is within the irrational—art, emotions, passion, poetry, myth, symbols—where God thrives and lives. For Hamann, different peoples possess different beliefs and hold differing answers to the questions of the Enlightenment; and we cannot shoehorn the ancient Greeks in with the (then) modern French to enforce our ideals. Societies and cultures are historically determined—the German language was created by German people, and could be created by nobody else; it needs the German mindset to bring it into being.
2. All such answers are knowable—they can be determined by reason, and the determinations subsequently taught and transmitted to others.
3. All of these answers must be compatible with each other, must exist as logical truths. If they are not or do not, then there exists an antinomy, a contradiction, and chaos will be the result.
«انسانی که وجودش قائم به دیگری است، دیگر به هیچ روی انسان نیست، اعتبار خود را از دست داده و چیزی نیست مگر ما یملک آن دیگری.» ص 123
زندگی در اثر هنری چیزی است مشابه با آنچه در طبیعت می ستاییم، یعنی نوعی قدرت، نیرو، توان، زندگی و حیات فوران کننده. از این روست که نقاشی های ممتاز، مجسمه های ممتاز و موسیقی ممتاز، ممتاز خوانده می شود، چرا که ما در آنها صرفاً رویۀ ظاهری را نمی بینیم، صناعت را نمی بینیم، بلکه چیزی را می بینیم که شاید هنرمند کاملاً از آن آگاه نباشد، یعنی همان جوشش و تپش درون هنرمند، جوشش و تپش روحیه ای سرمدی که او دست بر ق��ا نمایندۀ گویا و آگاه آن است. تپش این روحیه، در مرتبه ای فروتر، تپش طبیعت نیز هست و بدین ترتیب تأثیر جانبخش اثر هنری بر آدمی که آن را تماشا می کند یا به آن گوش می کند مشابه تأثیر برخی پدیده های طبیعی است. ص 163