I have to say, this sounds like a straw man
Moral facts
The fact that the philosophical orientation you follow disagrees with the cartoonishly defined category you are passing off as liberalism doesn’t make the latter a ‘positively indoctrinated dogma’.
Help me see this. Why does the moral anti-realist not know why they act as they do?
How is this an argument for the ethical non-realist to become a realist? They merely reply, "Not at all. Nothing of the sort 'seems to follow.' My actions are neither irrational nor impulsive. I'm not aware of 'denying the very possibility of rational freedom' -- how so? Such a view of my actions comes with extremely heavy philosophical baggage, and you would have to show me why this must be the case. On the contrary, I choose what I rationally believe is best for me. Certainly I may be wrong, in any given instance. But how is that either irrational or immoral?"
This wording signifies a right-leaning thingy where people believe everything should be approached with a sense of sacredness. I couldn't be more thumbs-up to that whole idea. That would really help people. Yet, it would be over my burned and rotting corpse that any religious group would step a foot into a public school in my area to talk about anything. Public schools are not for religious indoctrination. The answer is no.
That is, if humans don't have the power to sin mortally, then they probably also don't have the power to accept a gift of salvation, or to be deified. The "eternal consequences" that humans cannot effect are bidirectional. Created freedom always has a dual potency, and this is precisely why "Corruptio optimi pessima" (the corruption of the highest is the lowest). It's no coincidence that the same world which holds to a low anthropology has also lost its grasp on human dignity and nobility. The reprobate and the saint disappear simultaneously.
Hart has recently further popularized the thesis that Hell is unjust, and if a Christian views Hell as unjust then salvation is not undeserved. That is, if it is unjust for someone to not be saved, then salvation is not gratuitous.
A liberal society isn't going to do anything to me until my behavior starts getting scary.
Now I suppose that you could redefine an anti-realist as (only) someone who not only denies objective facts about moral values, but objective facts about the value of anything whatever.
Personally, I don't agree with the egoist at all. I agree with you: No one is infallible about what is to their own benefit, as human history sadly attests. But what I'm claiming is that the egoist/moral anti-realist is not being irrational, and there is no argument you can make to the contrary, on the basis of objective values. It's not that the anti-realist has to say, "I know for a fact that my egoism is good for me. I can't be wrong about that." They can just say, "Well, this is the way it looks to me, and you have yet to show me an argument for all these 'common values' and 'human flourishings' and 'ethics that extend beyond the personal.' All you're doing is asserting your belief in them and claiming that, if I could only see them, I'd like them too. Perhaps, perhaps not."
On such a view, every end can only be judged good relative to the pleasure or positive sentiment we associate with it. Yet since there is no rational appetite for Goodness itself (an infinite, “Highest Good” sought by reason in which pleasure and sentiment also find their natural rest) every good can only be judged good relative to some other finite good. The result is an infinite regress. Yet since we cannot consider an infinite ordering of finite goods to other finite goods, practical reason must cease at some point. When it does, it must bottom out in inchoate, irrational impulse. Something that is chosen "just because I feel impelled towards it," not because it is known as good.
One potential resolution to this problem lies in selecting some finite good (e.g. pleasure) as a “benchmark,” or proclaiming it the “Highest Good” by fiat. However, this does not actually resolve the issue, as ultimately there is no definitive standard by which to choose between different potential "ultimate" or even "benchmark" ends in a rational manner. We can always ask of any standard or benchmark, “but is it a truly good standard.” This will force us to invoke another standard by which to secure our judgment vis-à-vis the initial standard. However, this new judgment must itself be secured by yet another standard, etc., ad infinitum.
Moreover, without a love of goodness and truth for their own sake (i.e., the desires of the "rational soul"), which are secured by non-discursive synterisis, we cannot transcend our own finitude, moving past current beliefs and desires. Lacking this capacity, we have no way of deciding which of our loves are proper, and should be fostered and allowed to lead us, and which we should strive to uproot. Here, the deflation of reason leaves reason stranded and impotent in the face of choice. We find ourselves unable to rationally justify what Harry Frankfurt terms “second-order volitions,” i.e., the desire to have (or not have) other desires [something he argues is essential for freedom and personhood]. Since all of our desires are irrational, each desire can only be judged relative to some other irrational desire, and this regress can never end in a properly rational desire. All that is left to us is the futile pursuit of whatever desires we just so happen to have.
Rationality requires that we have the capacity to choose certain actions because we at least believe them to be truly good.
Indeed, but even though I said that the Christian ethos was foundational to Western culture, I don't know if monastic spiritual practices are relevant to politics in a pluralistic society. It is by nature a renunciate philosophy.
This highlights another important element in the pre-modern vision of reason. For Dante, man cannot slip into a dispassionate state of “buffered reason” where he “lets the facts speak” whenever he chooses. We are either properly oriented towards Truth and Goodness or we are not; we cannot chose to pivot between finite and spiritual ends as suits us. Rather, man’s intellect and will is subject to the pernicious influence of the unregenerated passions and appetites until “the rule of reason” has been positively established. The “rule of reason” can only be attained through repentance and a transformation accomplished through purgation and penance (something the Pilgrim must accomplish during his ascent of Mount Purgatory). In our life’s pilgrimage, our rationality, our most divine part, begins damaged by sin and in need of healing, a healing that can only be accomplished by ascetic labors and the aid of grace. We are born into a “web of sin” and will invariably become spiritually unwell in this way, to varying degrees, simply by living by the norms of a “fallen cosmos.” This means that a “turn upwards,” metanoia, a crucial part of each human life.
By contrast, if reason is merely something akin to computation, then we all have the same power of reason, albeit some of us may have access to more facts or might be quicker thinkers than others. On the modern view, asceticism and penance aimed at freeing the mind from the control of sensible desires in unnecessary. Here, it is worth noting why repentance is a prerequisite for the health of reason. Repentance represents a self-aware reflection on our own thought processes and choices, the ways in which they fall short, and a renewed commitment towards the pursuit of “what is really true” and what “is truly best” for their own sake. On the older view, where man’s reason cannot pass into an unclouded state free from the undue influence of the appetites and passions, such a move is necessary for the proper function of reason...
Indeed, in the Commedia, it is precisely the damned who appear to possess something like the Humean notion of reason. The damned are motivated by inchoate desires, impulses they do not attempt to master or understand. Count Ugolino will gnaw his rival’s brain for eternity, never questioning this act. The intellect of the damned has become a “slave to the passions,” and this is why we never see any gesture of repentance from them. They are rational just insomuch as they can draw connections between the senses and use these to pursue whatever desires have come to dominate them.
I think John Locke's point was that if we believe that the One Truth is discoverable by rational means, we'll never be at peace, because people come up with different formulations. It's better to start with mutual respect. If you're a protestant, it's none of your business what Catholics think.
I really don't think it's that. The anti-realist is happy to acknowledge the fact that suffering is bad for the beings concerned
i.e., there is no further moral conclusion to be drawn. The words "bad/good" carry no ethical implications, on this view; there are particular facts about what is bad or good for X in the sense specified above,
I guess the philosophical world is divided between those who believe that "good/beneficial/conducive to happiness/healthful/pleasurable for me" is what "morally good" means, and those who conceive of moral good as above and beyond the personal. I'm not sure how to bridge the division.
Just because someone is a moral anti-realist doesn’t mean they are unconcerned with the suffering of people or animals.
The most common arguments for moral relativism run something like this:
P1: Different peoples have many different standards of right and wrong. If one were born and raised in another culture, one would have different, perhaps contradictory ideas about what constitutes moral, just behavior.
Conclusion: Therefore, there are no absolute facts about right and wrong. What is good or just is entirely determined by cultural context (alternatively, for moral nihilism: “Therefore there can be no facts of the matter vis-à-vis good or evil.”)
If this does not look like a valid syllogism, there is a good reason for that! The conclusion does not follow from the premise at all. Cultural differences are only evidence for the truth of relativism if one has already assumed relativism and is suffering from confirmation bias.
To see why, consider that the same sort of argument could be made for all sorts of things. For example, “what shape is the Earth?” or “what causes infectious diseases?” What people have believed about these questions has varied by both time and place. If you were raised in a society where people thought the Earth was flat, or that infectious diseases were spread by witchcraft, you would most likely believe those things. Yet, does this demonstrate that the shape of the Earth or the etiology of infections varies by culture, or that there can be no fact of the matter? Does the fact that people disagree—that even today some people intransigently insist the world is flat—in any way demonstrate that the Earth either has no shape or that its shape varies?
To be sure, more savvy relativists will not argue that the conclusion follows from the premise. Rather, they will follow Nietzche’s lead in the Geneology of Morals, claiming that they have a better, abductive explanation for why moral norms exist. For instance, they might claim that ethics just reduces to evolutionary psychology, and that the customs that develop from our instincts don’t have anything to do with any objective standard of goodness.
Still, these sorts of arguments also have their weaknesses. They are open to all the attacks that have been leveled against reductionism. Arguments from speculative hypotheses in evolutionary psychology to the causes of moral norms flow from premises that are less well known than their conclusion. Not only this, but even if our customs were largely “the product of evolution,” it is unclear why this should entail that there are no facts about values. We might very well allow that what is “good for man” is related to (if not reducible to) his biological nature...
The "cultural differences argument’s " key premise can also be challenged. To be sure, cultural norms do vary. Yet we can allow that culture shapes morality without subscribing to an extreme relativism. Perhaps morality is always filtered through culture, but that does not preclude something stable from standing upstream of culture.
For instance, both the Greeks and the Callatians value honoring the dead, they just do so in different ways. Likewise, it seems that all cultures value courage, prudence, fortitude, etc. Hence, while we do observe meaningful differences in moral norms, these might be grounded in universal commonalities. For example, no culture gives babies razor sharp hunting knives as toys for their cribs. Such a prohibition is clearly not arbitrary. We can also note here that something very similar might be said of early attempts at science. While explanations of the world often did vary quite a bit, they also shared similarities because they were—in the end—attempts to describe the same thing.
Such an attack on the key premise of the "cultural differences argument" might be even more relevant to abductive arguments for moral relativism. For, it does not seem that morality can be “cultural norms all the way down.” Cultural norms come from somewhere, they have causes, they do not spring from the aether uncaused.
Hence, we can ask: “is it not true, at least on average, ceteris paribus, that it is better for people to be temperate instead of gluttonous or anhedonic, courageous instead of brash or cowardly, properly ambitious instead of grasping or apathetic, etc.? A strong rebuttal of virtue ethics would need to show that these traits are not beneficial on average, or that we somehow equivocate on these terms when we move from culture to culture. Yet this does not seem to be an easy case to make. To be sure, the critic can point to instances where “bad things happen to virtuous people,” or vice versa, but everyone is exposed to the vicissitudes of fortune, and it is the virtuous person who is most able to weather bad fortune
But arbiters of 'good' and 'bad' are literally nowhere to be seen, except within agreements between people. Is this clearer?
the middle to upper class dictum: "get good grades and wrack up accomplishments so you can go to a good college, and do the same there so you can get a good job, and then you can get a good job and do what you want."
I can see your point here (and Han's) but isn't it the case that liberalism in this context is not as significant the marketisation of everything and everyone - the West is in the business of churning out good capitalists who can live the dream of individual transformation though education, qualifications, enhanced earning power, spending and then, of course, there's the children we set upon the same path.
Isn’t human dissatisfaction and unhappiness inherent to our condition, rather than simply the product of the particular culture we come from? Even in societies with radically different values and social structures, people still grapple with restlessness, longing, and the sense that something essential is missing. Might this not be something to do with our nature? In the contemporary West we have given people permission to rebel and drop out since the 1950's - is it any wonder many people seem primed to do this as an almost ritualistic response to their lives? The idea that we are not authentic, not good enough, and not happy enough - a familiar trope in Christian Evangelical thought - and that we might become better, happier, and more authentic through a radical shift in belief or practice, seems to serve as a defining narrative of our time.
Its core vocabulary assumes a world of discrete individuals, neutral institutions and voluntary agreements. As a result, it lacks the concepts necessary to address power that operates indirectly, structurally or collectivel
The same is true for economic concentration. A company like Google or Facebook may have been built through freely entered contracts, investments and user agreements. No rights have been explicitly violated. Yet these companies exert enormous influence over public discourse, access to knowledge and the contours of civic life. Liberalism sees this as the exercise of legitimate freedom rather than as the emergence of de facto private sovereignty. Because the framework is based on rights and voluntary choice, it struggles to see how power can aggregate without formal coercion. (But Power is everywhere).
Liberalism’s emphasis on rights also tends to obscure the role of duties. If rights are powers granted through the mutual structure of society, they ought to imply obligations to that structure. But liberal theory tends to treat duties as secondary or voluntary. Civic responsibility is something you may take on, not something that defines you. The result is a moral and political culture where everyone is entitled and few feel responsible, where freedom is understood as non-interference rather than shared self-governance.
Even in areas like education, healthcare and water access, liberalism’s instinct is to see goods as optional and their distribution as a matter of individual choice. When these goods are commodified or enclosed, when water is bottled and sold, when care work is commercialised, when genetic information is patented, liberalism cannot object. These are seen as legitimate exercises of property rights and freedom of enterprise. The fact that these markets systematically exclude and exploit is not, by itself, grounds for concern unless someone’s rights are violated.
For me, freedom and therefore the protection of most liberal "values" is about maximising democracy in every facet of socio-economic interaction and decentralising decision making as much as possible.
Ah, the tragic heart of your post. What do you mean by "And I do think this is different"? Different from the past?
I had the impression that Hadot sees Christianity as having appropriated the spiritual practices of 'pagan' philosophy and redirected them into a theological framework—ultimately subordinating philosophy to dogma. While Hadot respects many Christian thinkers, he is critical of the loss of philosophy’s independent role as a transformative way of life with its own internal plurality. (I think that is due to a kind of conflict between reason and faith, which the orthodox and Catholic traditions manage to reconcile (or believe they do), but which emerges again with Luther and reformed theology.)
Its bet is that we can coexist without agreeing on ultimate ends. That isn’t moral emptiness; it’s a kind of modesty.
Myopia isn’t unique to liberalism. It built into the normative commitments any political or philosophical view expresses
I'm a bit skeptical of narratives that try to pin all these problems on just the (mis)rule of leaders on one side of the political spectrum. The problems being discussed (difficulty getting good jobs, huge numbers of applicants for each job, over qualified workers, unaffordable housing, low quality services, welfare expenses becoming unaffordable, [and we might add extreme angst over migration] etc.) are endemic to the West. You see the same sorts of complaints re Canada, France, Germany, Sweden, Spain, the US, etc. Yet different sides of the political spectrum have had very varying degrees of long term control across these different states.
Nor is it clear that things are better anywhere else. Housing is increasingly unaffordable in the US, yet it is one of the most affordable rental and ownership markets in the world. It's "hell" in Canada and the UK, yet income to rental/mortgage rates are actually a good deal worse in most of the developing world.
The three greatest metaphysicians who ever existed - Plato, Aristotle and St.Thomas Aquinas - had no system in the idealistic sense of the word. Their ambition was not to achieve philosophy once and for all, but to maintain it and to serve it in their own times, as we have to maintain it and to serve it in ours. For us, as for them, the great thing is not to achieve a system of the world as if being could be deduced from thought, but to relate reality, as we know it, to the permanent principles in whose light all the changing problems of science, of ethics and of art have to be solved. A metaphysics of existence cannot be a system wherewith to get rid of philosophy, it is an always open inquiry, whose conclusions are both always the same and always new, because it is conducted under the guidance of immutable principles, which will never exhaust experience, or be themselves exhausted by it. For even though, as is impossible, all that which exists were known to us, existence itself would still remain a mystery. Why, asked Leibniz, is there something rather than nothing ?
The critique shouldn’t rest on some moralistic asceticism or a return to “just the essentials.”
Achievement society is wholly dominated by the modal verb can—in contrast to disciplinary society, which issues prohi bitions and deploys should. After a certain point of productivity, should reaches a limit. To increase productivity, it is replaced by can. The call for motivation, initiative, and projects exploits more effectively than whips and commands. As an entrepreneur of the self, the achievement-subject is free insofar as he or she is not subjugated to a commanding and exploiting Other. However, the subject is still not really free because he or she now engages in self-exploitation— and does so of his or her own free will. The exploiter is the exploited. The achievement-subject is perpetrator and victim in one. Auto-exploitation proves much more efficient than auto-exploitation because it is accompanied by a feeling of liberty. This makes possible exploitation without domination.
Foucault observes that neoliberal Homo oeconomicus does not inhabit disciplinary society—an entrepreneur of the self is no longer a disciplinary subject1—but he fails to notice that this entrepreneur of the self is not truly free: Homo oeconomicus only thinks himself free when in fact he is exploiting himself. Foucault adopts a positive attitude toward neoliberalism. Uncritically, he assumes that the neoliberal regime—the system of “the least state” or “frugal government,” which stands for the “management of freedom”2—enables civil liberty (bürgerliche Freiheit). Foucault fails to notice the structure of violence and coercion under writing the neoliberal dictum of freedom. Consequently, he interprets it as the freedom to be free: “I am going to produce what you need to be free. I am going to see to it that you are free to be free.”3 The neoliberal dictum of freedom finds expression in the paradoxical imperative, Be free. But this plunges the achievement-subject into depression and exhaustion. Even though Foucault’s “ethics of the self” stands opposed to political repression and auto-exploitation in general, it is blind to the violence of the freedom that underlies auto-exploitation.
You can produces massive compulsion, on which the achievement-subject dashes him- or herself to pieces. Because it appears as freedom, self-generated compulsion is not recognized as such. You can exercises even greater constraint than You should. Auto-compulsion proves more fatal than auto-compulsion, because there is no way to resist oneself. The neoliberal regime conceals its compulsive structure behind the seeming freedom of the single individual, who no longer understands him- or herself as a subjugated subject (“subject to”), but as a project in the process of realizing itself (entwerfendes Projekt). That is its ruse: now, whoever fails is at fault and personally bears the guilt. No one else can be made responsible for failure. Nor is there any possibility for pardon, relief, or atonement. In this way, not only a crisis of debt occurs—a crisis of gratification does, as well.
Relief from debt, financial and psychological, and gratification both presume the Other. Lack of a binding connection to the Other is the transcendental condition for crises of gratification and debt. Such crises make it plain that capitalism—counter to widespread belief (e.g., Benjamin)—is not a religion. Every religion operates with both debt (guilt) and relief (pardon). But capitalism only works with debt and default. It offers no possibility for atonement, which would free the debtor from liability. The impossibility of mitigation and atonement also accounts for the achievement subject’s depression. Together with burnout, depression represents an unredeemable failure of ability—that is, it amounts to psychic insolvency. Literally, “insolvency” (from the Latin solvere) signifies the impossibility of paying off a debt.
Eros is a relationship to the Other situated beyond achievement, performance, and ability. Being able not to be able (Nicht-Können-Können) represents its negative counterpart. The negativity of otherness—that is, the atopia of the Other, which eludes all ability—is constitutive of erotic experience: “The other bears alterity as an essence. And this is why [we] have sought this alterity in the absolutely original relationship of eros, a relationship that is impossible to translate into powers.”4 Absolutizing ability is precisely what annihilates the Other. A successful relationship with the Other finds expression as a kind of failure. Only by way of being able not to be able does the Other appear:
Can this relationship with the other through Eros be characterized as a failure? Once again, the answer is yes, if one adopts the terminology of current descriptions, if one wants to characterize the erotic by “grasp ing,” “possessing,” or “knowing.” But there is nothing of all this, or the failure of all this, in eros. If one could possess, grasp, and know the other, it would not be other. Possessing, knowing, and grasping are synonyms of power.5
Quote from Emmanuel Levinas, Time and the Other
They also control the organs of propaganda to stoke dissatisfaction and displace their own wrongdoing onto convenient targets, thus turning gullible people against their neighbours as well as their own self-interest.

Traditional premodern religion provided an ontological security, by grounding us in an encompassing metaphysical vision that explains the cosmos and our role within it.
Modernity and postmodernity question such transcendental narratives and therefore leave us with ontological anxiety about the apparent meaninglessness of the universe and the ungroundedness of our lives within it. The result is that we are afflicted with “a deepening condition of metaphysical homelessness,” which is psychologically difficult to bear (Berger, P. (1973). The Homeless Mind.)
...If one’s self-image involves internalizing the perceptions that others have of us, the anonymity of mass society is part of modernity’s lack-of-identity problem. How to distinguish oneself, if, as DeLillo has also said, “only the lethal believer, the person who kills and dies for faith,” is taken seriously in modern society (Juergensmeyer 125)? Better to be known as someone who was willing to die for his beliefs, than not to be known at all – than to be no one at all.
This helps us to understand why terrorist attacks such as those on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, which seem strategically absurd and self-defeating, can nevertheless be desirable. They are not instrumental means to realize political goals but symbolic. ...
The main problem with our usual understanding of secularity is that it is taken-for-granted, so we are not aware that it is a worldview. It is an ideology that pretends to be the everyday world we live in. Most of us assume that it is simply the way the world really is, once superstitious beliefs about it have been removed. ...
By privatizing an unmediated relationship between more individualized Christians...
The OP offers a broad indictment of liberalism. But there is no clear argument. You've written a mood piece. The dissatisfaction is real, but the reasoning is thin. Liberalism is accused of being hollow, flattening, spiritually dead. But the case is assumed rather than made.
At its core, the critique chafes at pluralism itself. It wants one truth, publicly affirmed and normatively binding. Liberalism refuses this. It does not deny truth—it refuses to coerce consensus. That refusal is treated here as decadence. But it is, in fact, a guardrail against authoritarianism. The demand that a culture publicly reflect a metaphysical or theological unity is a recipe for repression—of minorities, of dissenters, of difference. Liberalism protects that space. It allows communities to pursue deep, even ultimate, goods—so long as they don’t do so by coercion. That is not a bug. It is the point.
The deeper issue is metaphysical. Liberalism is faulted for not being a theology. It doesn’t offer a doctrine of eros, virtue, or transcendent meaning. But that’s by design. Liberalism is a political framework. It permits those deeper views—it doesn’t impose one. If that’s the flaw, then name the alternative. A confessional state? A return to teleology? A politics grounded in love? Perhaps. But that needs to be argued, not implied through nostalgia and allusion.
Indeed, despite the fact that it seems obvious that all cultures indoctrinate their children into the dominant ideology, liberalism often seems to think it is excluded from this historical norm, such that any alternative form of education seems like pernicious indoctrination. That's one of the perils of "bourgeois metaphysics," is that it becomes transparent and cannot be recognized as an ideology. It can default into the claim that it "isn't an ideology," but rather "the freedom to have any ideology one wishes." That's the myopia of liberalism in a nutshell, ideology gone transparent, a historically distinct (and historically quite narrow) vision of freedom become totalized and absolutized.
Liberalism is equated with consumer capitalism, secularism, and moral relativism.
Bathing in one's subjective sense of the numinous might also be somewhat indulgent and narcissistic.
Liberalism has always had the potential to become a victim of its own impulse to dismantle institutions and expand the definition of citizenship - especially in the context of capitalism.
So again, logically, if eternal punishment does in fact occur, is God to then be understood as not being the ultimate telos/end of all that exists?
Reply to Objection 2. Even the punishment that is inflicted according to human laws, is not always intended as a medicine for the one who is punished, but sometimes only for others: thus when a thief is hanged, this is not for his own amendment, but for the sake of others, that at least they may be deterred from crime through fear of the punishment, according to Proverbs 19:25: "The wicked man being scourged, the fool shall be wiser." Accordingly the eternal punishments inflicted by God on the reprobate, are medicinal punishments for those who refrain from sin through the thought of those punishments, according to Psalm 59:6: "Thou hast given a warning to them that fear Thee, that they may flee from before the bow, that Thy beloved may be delivered."
