(Excerpt) In his treatment of contemporary legal issues and, more deeply, his analysis of the manner in which changing religious assumptions and goals shape the culture from which law naturally grows, Smith has provided both a strong critique of contemporary “secular” pieties and an explanation for the culture wars so often derided or minimized by those most determined to deconstruct traditional culture. Still, I would argue that Smith’s wide-ranging, radical rethinking of contemporary social disorder does not go far enough. As Smith’s discussion of contemporary judicial treatment of social structure makes clear, today’s legal elites are at heart totalitarian in their concern to reshape all of society and all of human nature and belief. The...
This article is an invited response to James Davison Hunter’s much-discussed book To Change the Worl...
In modern law we exist as a plurality of persons. This is essentially my thesis, starkly put: that w...
In this article, the author presents his views in response to the article The Last Chapter? by criti...
(Excerpt) In his treatment of contemporary legal issues and, more deeply, his analysis of the manner...
*I thank the editors and Erik Sengers for their helpful comments. Adam Smith may well be the founder...
(Excerpt) The pleasures of reading Steven D. Smith’s writing are varied and immense. That certainly ...
Traditionalist Christians who oppose same-sex marriage and other cultural developments in the United...
Traditionalist Christians who oppose same-sex marriage and other cultural developments in the United...
(Excerpt) Nevertheless, some deep ironies and puzzles run through the text of Pagans and Christians....
(Excerpt) Understanding the terms under which Christianity and paganism could coexist in antiquity t...
I outline and examine Prof Moxter’s thesis, that State Law, to be effective, must not be obeyed onl...
(Excerpt) In this response paper, I will offer four thoughts. First, I’m not sure the contemporary p...
A basic tension in the U.S. constitutional and political order exists between two important ideas ab...
This article is an invited response to James Davison Hunter’s much-discussed book To Change the Worl...
(Excerpt) One of the most interesting aspects of this generally very interesting book was the discus...
This article is an invited response to James Davison Hunter’s much-discussed book To Change the Worl...
In modern law we exist as a plurality of persons. This is essentially my thesis, starkly put: that w...
In this article, the author presents his views in response to the article The Last Chapter? by criti...
(Excerpt) In his treatment of contemporary legal issues and, more deeply, his analysis of the manner...
*I thank the editors and Erik Sengers for their helpful comments. Adam Smith may well be the founder...
(Excerpt) The pleasures of reading Steven D. Smith’s writing are varied and immense. That certainly ...
Traditionalist Christians who oppose same-sex marriage and other cultural developments in the United...
Traditionalist Christians who oppose same-sex marriage and other cultural developments in the United...
(Excerpt) Nevertheless, some deep ironies and puzzles run through the text of Pagans and Christians....
(Excerpt) Understanding the terms under which Christianity and paganism could coexist in antiquity t...
I outline and examine Prof Moxter’s thesis, that State Law, to be effective, must not be obeyed onl...
(Excerpt) In this response paper, I will offer four thoughts. First, I’m not sure the contemporary p...
A basic tension in the U.S. constitutional and political order exists between two important ideas ab...
This article is an invited response to James Davison Hunter’s much-discussed book To Change the Worl...
(Excerpt) One of the most interesting aspects of this generally very interesting book was the discus...
This article is an invited response to James Davison Hunter’s much-discussed book To Change the Worl...
In modern law we exist as a plurality of persons. This is essentially my thesis, starkly put: that w...
In this article, the author presents his views in response to the article The Last Chapter? by criti...