Liberalism in its idealist conception of the world has liberals think power is (and treat it as) its own self-contained virtue and ethos rather than as a practical expression of dialectical means to a materialist end, as a practically-expressed ability and capability of material will-enforcement for individuals/groups/classes etc upon their material conditions and antagonistic forces. It's the same hand-in-hand with their (lack-of) concept of authority. they treat it as its own thing and spin in circles eternally about it, and when authority they don't like: 'authoritarianism'
Liberalism in its idealist conception of the world has liberals think power is (and treat it as) its own self-contained virtue and ethos rather than as a practical expression of dialectical means to a materialist end, as a practically-expressed ability and capability of material will-enforcement for individuals/groups/classes etc upon their material conditions and antagonistic forces. It's the same hand-in-hand with their (lack-of) concept of authority. they treat it as its own thing and spin in circles eternally about it, and when authority they don't like: 'authoritarianism'
Well said. If I repeated it to a liberal they would think I'm insane.