Liberalism’s ReligionCécile Laborde argues that religion is more than a statement of belief or a moral code. It refers to comprehensive ways of life, theories of justice, modes of association, and vulnerable collective identities. By disaggregating these dimensions, she addresses questions about whether Western secularism and religion can be applied more universally. |
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Liberalism's Religion
Gebruikersrecensie - Publishers WeeklyLaborde tackles the job of defining what the philosophical system of liberalism means when it says religion. She attempts to discern what is recognizable as a religion from the point of view of ... Volledige review lezen
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accessible appeal argue argument autonomy basic burden Cécile Laborde Chapter Charles Taylor Christian church citizens claims coherence interests competence comprehensive conscience Court critical religion critique cultural defend democratic dimensions of religion disagreement about justice discrimination doctrine Eisgruber and Sager endorse epistemic equal liberty Establishment Clause ethical independence ethical salience example freedom of association freedom of religion gious Hobby Lobby Ibid identity individuals infringe integrity interpretive IPCs Islam Jeremy Waldron John Rawls Journal justificatory justify Kent Greenawalt laïcité Law Review Lawrence Sager liberal egalitarians liberal justice liberal legitimacy liberal neutrality majority bias minimal secularism ministerial exception minorities moral Muslim nonestablishment nonreligious normative one’s Oxford University Press people’s personal ethics Political Liberalism principle protection public reason Quong Rawls Rawls’s reasonable disagreement relevant reli Religion Inc religious associations religious exemptions Religious Freedom religious groups Ronald Dworkin Saba Mahmood salient Schwartzman secular social sovereignty substantive symbolic theorists tion vulnerable