Williams's philosophical hero is Friedrich Nietzsche, whom he calls "the greatest moral philosopher of the last century". Nietzsche was sure that the consequences of recognising that the claims of ethics to objectivity were illusory would be drastic. He thought that Christian morality, and its descendants, socialism and liberalism, would be replaced by something equivalent to the worship of power and domination.
Nietzsche was convinced that once you had "seen through" the bogus claims of morality and ethics, you would realise that there was nothing left except (as Hobbes put it) "a perpetual and restless quest for power after power, that ceaseth only in death". The participants in that struggle could only be judged by how successful they were in the competition to take power from other people and maintain it over them.
Williams does not follow Nietzsche on this point. But it is not altogether clear why not. Williams seems unworried by Nietzsche's conclusion that, once we realise its claims to objective truth are an illusion, what we now think of morality will be eliminated and replaced by an obsession with power. He thinks we can find reasons for keeping up our commitment to, say, liberalism, which will survive our recognising that convictions about ethical values have no objective foundation.
Perhaps it is his conviction that philosophical arguments never change anything very much that leads him to that conclusion. Whatever the reason, there seem to me to be grounds for more anxiety on this matter than Williams recognises, or at least than he reveals. The foundations of liberal social order are less secure than they seem: one only needs to consult the history of the last 100 years to see how swiftly they can collapse in order to feel distinctly queasy about the extent they could survive the generalised conviction that all there ever is, or could be, is a struggle for power. Working out what you, or your group, need to do in order to be the most powerful around is very different from working out what needs to be done in order to comply with the demands of justice — or even simple human decency.
I have focused on the issue of the objectivity of ethics, but it is only one of many important philosophical problems that Williams addresses in these illuminating and instructive essays and reviews. This is a book which should inspire its readers to go and read — or perhaps re-read — Williams's other works. Whichever one they pick up, they will encounter a restless, questing intelligence, and a determination to be as precise and clear as possible.
And yet they may also encounter the melancholy sense that philosophical argument cannot improve people. In Williams's writing, you can sometimes hear a distant echo of lines from W.B. Yeats's disturbing poem "Blood and the Moon":
No matter what I said,For wisdom is the property of the deadA something incompatible with life; and power,Like everything that has the stain of blood,A property of the living.
It is not a comforting message. But as Williams insisted, philosophy should not be edifying. It should be true.


















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