“…To see how this might work itself out in practice, it will be helpful to compare the henofideist approach to that of McLaughlin, who has developed perhaps the best recent defense of religious upbringing. In a series of articles McLaughlin (1984McLaughlin ( , 1985McLaughlin ( , 1990, argues that at least in the milieu of a diverse society, ... where the child will not only be surrounded constantly by a range of religious and non-religious perspectives, but will also be inevitably drawn into the open debate about such matters which is part of the tradition of such societies, particularly through liberal education, the provision of which I enjoin on parents as a responsibility (1990, p. 111), it is possible for parents to give their children a religious upbringing without violating the central liberal value of personal autonomy. In order to do so, McLaughlin argues, the parent must pursue 'autonomy via faith:'…”