
The Thomistic Institute John Henry Newman's Critique of Liberalism: Lessons from the Aristotelian Tradition – Prof. Joshua Hochschild
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Feb 13, 2026 Prof. Joshua Hochschild, a philosopher and former dean specializing in medieval logic and metaphysics, explores John Henry Newman’s critique of liberalism. He links Newman to Aristotelian ideas about first principles, intellectual virtue, and the illative sense. Listens unpack Newman’s poem and Idea of the University, and shows how faith, reason, and doctrine development interconnect.
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Liberalism As An Epistemological Error
- Newman locates liberalism as an epistemological error, not merely a political or theological stance.
- He defines it as false liberty of thought that subjects first principles and revealed truths to improper human judgment.
First Principles Are Knowable Without Proof
- Newman defends knowledge of first principles as indemonstrable yet genuinely knowable by the mind.
- Rejecting such knowledge leads to positivism, empiricism, subjectivism, and the reduction of religion to sentiment.
Intellectual Virtue Trumps Method
- Newman emphasizes intellectual virtue over method as the key to grasping truth and first principles.
- He frames education and assent as matters of character formation, aligning with Aristotle's virtues like phronesis and sophia.





