Religious Liberty in Western ThoughtNoel B. Reynolds, W. Cole Durham Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing, 2003 - 312 lappuses This is a print on demand book and is therefore non- returnable. In this volume, several leading scholars harvest the best of Western thinking on religious liberty. An opening chapter shows how religious liberty emerged slowly in the West through centuries of cruel experience and growing enlightenment. Separate chapters thereafter take up the unique role of such titans as Marsilius, Luther, Calvin, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Burke, Tocqueville, and the American framers in the Western drama of religious liberty. From widely divergent experiences, these titans discovered the cardinal principles of religious liberty -- religious pluralism and toleration, religious equality and non- discrimination, liberty of conscience and association, freedom of expression and exercise. From widely discordant convictions, they distilled the most enduring models of church and state and of religion and law in the West -- from the organic models of earlier centuries to the dualistic models of more recent times. Contributors: |
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1.–5. rezultāts no 28.
... contract , but in the biblical tradition . Hobbes wrestles with a fundamental Reformation " quandary about authority , interpretation , and liberty " ( p . 140 ) . While he relies much more heavily on secular authority to resolve this ...
... contract theory , but also in the framing of modern conceptions of religious freedom . Many of his most fundamental arguments have become so axiomatic that their provenance is almost forgotten . In this regard one thinks , for example ...
... Contract without great thought and with even less coherence . Even as repopularized by writers such as Robert Bellah , the notion of civil religion seems flawed with superficiality — the outer rituals of patriotism , ritual phrases in ...
... contract , " Burke held society to be a divine decree , a partnership between those living , those dead , and those as yet unborn . Significantly , however . Burke saw the establishment not as a means of augmenting political power , but ...
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Saturs
RELIGIOUS RIGHTS A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE | 29 |
POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN MARSILIUS OF PADUA | 59 |
MARTIN LUTHER ON RELIGIOUS LIBERTY | 75 |
MODERATE RELIGIOUS LIBERTY IN THE THEOLOGY OF JOHN CALVIN | 83 |
THOMAS HOBBES ON RELIGIOUS LIBERTY AND SOVEREIGNTY | 123 |
JOHN LOCKE A THEOLOGY OF RELIGIOUS LIBERTY | 143 |
ROUSSEAUS CIVIL RELIGION AND THE IDEAL OF WHOLENESS | 161 |
EDMUND BURKES TOLERANT ESTABLISHMENT | 203 |
RELIGIOUS LIBERTY AND RELIGION IN THE AMERICAN FOUNDING REVISITED | 245 |
THE ACCOMMODATION OF RELIGION A TOCQUEVILLIAN PERSPECTIVE | 291 |
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Religious Liberty in Western Thought Noel B. Reynolds,W. Cole Durham (Jr.) Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 1996 |