The first person I met when I arrived in Oxford in 1975 to study Philosophy, Politics and Economics was Isaiah Berlin. Isaiah was a personal friend of one of my professors at the University of Toronto, who had asked Isaiah if, as a personal favour, he would serve as my 'moral tutor'. This rather quaint Oxford version of an 'academic advisor' turned out, in my case, to be a profoundly apt term for the role that Berlin was to play in my intellectual development. © 2009 Springer Netherlands.
CITATION STYLE
Shanker, S. G. (2009). Three concepts of liberty. In After Cognitivism: A Reassessment of Cognitive Science and Philosophy (pp. 205–212). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-9992-2_13
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