Presents an evaluation of the use of the public/private and religion/state binaries in liberal political thought since the Protestant Reformation.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Craig Martin is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at St. Thomas Aquinas College, New York.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction On "Using Religion" Chapter One Delimiting Religion Chapter Two On the Origin of the "Private Sphere": Religion and Politics from Luther to Locke Chapter Three John Locke and the Circulation of Power in a Liberal Democracy Chapter Four Configured for Exclusion: Characterizations of Religion in Contemporary Liberal Political Philosophy Chapter Five "To Each His Own": On the Failure to Challenge Hegemonic Ideology Conclusion Rethinking the Circulation of Power in a Liberal Democracy
Introduction On "Using Religion" Chapter One Delimiting Religion Chapter Two On the Origin of the "Private Sphere": Religion and Politics from Luther to Locke Chapter Three John Locke and the Circulation of Power in a Liberal Democracy Chapter Four Configured for Exclusion: Characterizations of Religion in Contemporary Liberal Political Philosophy Chapter Five "To Each His Own": On the Failure to Challenge Hegemonic Ideology Conclusion Rethinking the Circulation of Power in a Liberal Democracy
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