Full, open, and civilized discourse among citizens is fundamental to the life of a liberal democracy. It seems trite to assert that no discourse should be prohibited or excluded simply because it is grounded in religious faith or employs religious beliefs to justify a particular position. Yet there are those who contend that it is improper for citizens to use religious arguments when debating or deciding issues in the public square, that metaphorical arena where issues of public policy are discussed and contested. In this article we challenge this position, examining the various arguments that are put forward for keeping public discourse secular, arguments that when citizens explicitly ground their social and political views in their religi...
This book is propelled by the following question: How can free and equal citizens who are deeply div...
I first examine and reject liberal political methods of addressing the question of religious speech ...
Discussions involving religion’s place today in politics, the academy, the media, even in shaping pu...
Full, open, and civilized discourse among citizens is fundamental to the life of a liberal democracy...
For at least the past decade or so, law-and-religion scholars have vigorously debated the issue of w...
Can religious arguments legitimately be used in public discourse? In recent years, philosophical dis...
Should citizens armed with religious reasons for public policy outcomes present those reasons in the...
Christian critics of liberalism, and especially of contemporary public-reason liberalism, often argu...
In liberal democracies such as America, the mixing of religion and politics is often thought to be p...
This Article investigates the questions whether and when religious claims may enter into public deba...
This Article provides an account of the notion of a religious argument, distinguishes several roles ...
The problem of public religion in a liberal democracy is certainly not a road less travelled. There ...
In the United States, as in any vibrant democracy, the government is profoundly impacted by the publ...
Traditionally, liberals have confined religion to the sphere of the ‘private’ or ‘non-political’. H...
Prominent observers complain that public discourse in America is shallow and unedifying -- This deba...
This book is propelled by the following question: How can free and equal citizens who are deeply div...
I first examine and reject liberal political methods of addressing the question of religious speech ...
Discussions involving religion’s place today in politics, the academy, the media, even in shaping pu...
Full, open, and civilized discourse among citizens is fundamental to the life of a liberal democracy...
For at least the past decade or so, law-and-religion scholars have vigorously debated the issue of w...
Can religious arguments legitimately be used in public discourse? In recent years, philosophical dis...
Should citizens armed with religious reasons for public policy outcomes present those reasons in the...
Christian critics of liberalism, and especially of contemporary public-reason liberalism, often argu...
In liberal democracies such as America, the mixing of religion and politics is often thought to be p...
This Article investigates the questions whether and when religious claims may enter into public deba...
This Article provides an account of the notion of a religious argument, distinguishes several roles ...
The problem of public religion in a liberal democracy is certainly not a road less travelled. There ...
In the United States, as in any vibrant democracy, the government is profoundly impacted by the publ...
Traditionally, liberals have confined religion to the sphere of the ‘private’ or ‘non-political’. H...
Prominent observers complain that public discourse in America is shallow and unedifying -- This deba...
This book is propelled by the following question: How can free and equal citizens who are deeply div...
I first examine and reject liberal political methods of addressing the question of religious speech ...
Discussions involving religion’s place today in politics, the academy, the media, even in shaping pu...