Most Liberals hold that public policies ought always be justifiable by reference to public reasons; that citizens should also refrain from advocacy in the absence of such reasons; and that exclusively religious reasons cannot be public reasons. This is challenged by Paul Weithman and Christopher Eberle. Both argue that basic liberal principles permit citizens in some circumstances to advance exclusively religious reasons, and in particular that Rawls’s notions of reasonableness (Weithman) and the strains of commitment (Eberle) can be used in defence of this position. I argue that neither makes out his case, and that no plausible case has been made against the standard Liberal view.John Chandle
All of the articles in this Symposium deal with the question to what extent liberalism as a politica...
When people hold religious views that have implications for moral choices and for the desirable uses...
The current understanding of liberal democracy in many academic circles includes a set of restraints...
This thesis has the goal of finding the proper place of religious reasons in a pluralistic liberal d...
The role of religious commitments in John Rawls’s version of political liberalism has drawn frequent...
Can religious arguments legitimately be used in public discourse? In recent years, philosophical dis...
Political philosophers widely assume that public reason liberalism is hostile to religious contribut...
This thesis concerns the reason-giving aspect of legitimacy. What reasons must be used to justify co...
Christian critics of liberalism, and especially of contemporary public-reason liberalism, often argu...
This thesis has the goal of exploring the proper place of religious reasoning in liberal politics, a...
The contributors to this Special Issue all suggest that Christianity is compatible with political li...
Public reason liberalism requires that coercive measures be justified to all reasonable citizens. As...
In recent years, leading public reason liberals have argued that publicly justifying coercive laws a...
Most public reason theorists believe that citizens are under a ‘duty of restraint’. Citizens must re...
In recent debates on the strained relationship between liberal-democratic states and organised relig...
All of the articles in this Symposium deal with the question to what extent liberalism as a politica...
When people hold religious views that have implications for moral choices and for the desirable uses...
The current understanding of liberal democracy in many academic circles includes a set of restraints...
This thesis has the goal of finding the proper place of religious reasons in a pluralistic liberal d...
The role of religious commitments in John Rawls’s version of political liberalism has drawn frequent...
Can religious arguments legitimately be used in public discourse? In recent years, philosophical dis...
Political philosophers widely assume that public reason liberalism is hostile to religious contribut...
This thesis concerns the reason-giving aspect of legitimacy. What reasons must be used to justify co...
Christian critics of liberalism, and especially of contemporary public-reason liberalism, often argu...
This thesis has the goal of exploring the proper place of religious reasoning in liberal politics, a...
The contributors to this Special Issue all suggest that Christianity is compatible with political li...
Public reason liberalism requires that coercive measures be justified to all reasonable citizens. As...
In recent years, leading public reason liberals have argued that publicly justifying coercive laws a...
Most public reason theorists believe that citizens are under a ‘duty of restraint’. Citizens must re...
In recent debates on the strained relationship between liberal-democratic states and organised relig...
All of the articles in this Symposium deal with the question to what extent liberalism as a politica...
When people hold religious views that have implications for moral choices and for the desirable uses...
The current understanding of liberal democracy in many academic circles includes a set of restraints...