The Palgrave Handbook of Religion and State Volume II
Global Perspectives
Herausgeber: Holzer, Shannon
The Palgrave Handbook of Religion and State Volume II
Global Perspectives
Herausgeber: Holzer, Shannon
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
¿The Palgrave Handbook of Religion and State Volume II: Global Perpectives addresses issues of Religion and State from a multitude of disciplines. The volume begins with the philosophical discussion of perennial issues that have to do with the origin and nature of rights. One question centers on the right to use one's religious beliefs to enact laws. This discussion alone sets this handbook apart from other handbooks of its type. While addressing these perennial questions, this volume includes authors who interact with the work of John Rawls, Hobbes, Rousseau, and a host of contemporary…mehr
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- The Palgrave Handbook of Religion and State Volume I168,99 €
- The Palgrave Handbook of Islam in Africa162,99 €
- The Palgrave Handbook of Islam in Africa161,99 €
- Gary ChartierChristianity and the Nation-State119,99 €
- John ValkAn Islamic Worldview from Turkey66,99 €
- The Palgrave Handbook of Religion, Peacebuilding, and Development in Africa184,99 €
- The Religious Other138,99 €
-
-
-
¿The Palgrave Handbook of Religion and State Volume II: Global Perpectives addresses issues of Religion and State from a multitude of disciplines. The volume begins with the philosophical discussion of perennial issues that have to do with the origin and nature of rights. One question centers on the right to use one's religious beliefs to enact laws. This discussion alone sets this handbook apart from other handbooks of its type. While addressing these perennial questions, this volume includes authors who interact with the work of John Rawls, Hobbes, Rousseau, and a host of contemporary philosophers. The subsequent sections address the American Constitutional Experiment, religion, state, and law in the Americas.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Springer International Publishing / Springer International Publishing AG
- Seitenzahl: 800
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Januar 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 210mm x 148mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 1014g
- ISBN-13: 9783031356117
- ISBN-10: 303135611X
- Artikelnr.: 72710464
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
- Verlag: Springer International Publishing / Springer International Publishing AG
- Seitenzahl: 800
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Januar 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 210mm x 148mm x 43mm
- Gewicht: 1014g
- ISBN-13: 9783031356117
- ISBN-10: 303135611X
- Artikelnr.: 72710464
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
¿Shannon Holzer is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Houston Christian University. He has earned degrees in the areas of religion, philosophy, and religion, politics, and society. Holzer earned his Ph.D. in Religion, Politics and Society from Baylor University's J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State Studies. He also holds a M.A. in Philosophy from Biola University's Talbot School of Theology. He has published in the areas of philosophy, law, politics, and religion. Holzer is often heard on Houston's KTRH news commenting on religion, politics, and society.
1: Introduction.- Part 1: Religion and State in Philosophy.- Chapter 2:
Religious Reasons in Political Discourse.- Chapter 3: A Plantingan Response
to Public Reason Accessibilism.- Chapter 4: Matters of Conscience.- Chapter
5: On the Definition of Religious Belief.- Chapter 6: Natural Law and the
American Founding.- Part 2: Religion and the American Constitutional
Experiment.- Chapter 7: Why Do We Think the Framers Wanted to Separate
Church and State?- Chapter 8: American Church - State Relations:
Jefferson's Conception of Religious Freedom.- Chapter 9: A Liberal and
Generous Toleration: John Adams and the Freedom for Religion.- Chapter 10:
Nondiscrimination or Accommodation?: Two Competing Visions of the Free
Exercise Clause.- Chapter 11: In Praise of Separationism: A Lamentation on
the Demise of that Famous Paragraph in Everson v. Board of Education.-
Chapter 12: The Requirement of Church and State to be Forever Separate.-
Chapter 13: Why Church and State Should be Kept Separatebut Politics and
Religion Should Not.- Chapter 14: Is Religion Serious Enough to Be Taken
Seriously?- Chapter 15: Does the Separation of Church and State Require
Secularism?- Chapter 16: Miltonic Liberty and the Grounds for
Disestablishment in A Treatise of Civil Power.- Chapter 17: A Marriage of
Opposites: Tocqueville on Religion and Democracy.- Chapter 18: Public
Spirit as Mediating Influence Between Tocqueville's "Spirit of Religion"
and "Spirit of Freedom".- Part 3: Religion and Law in the American Courts.-
Chapter 19: Testing Neutrality: The Courts' Use of Legal Tests in
Determining Establishment and Free Exercise Cases.- Chapter 20: Corporate
Religious Liberty After Hobby Lobby.- Chapter 21: The Ministerial Exception
and the Distinction between Church and State.- Chapter 22: The Definition
of Marriage from Reynolds to Obergefell.- Chapter 23: The Separation of
Church and State: The Court's 'Secular Purpose' and the Argumentum ex
Ignorantia.- Chapter 24: Changes in Conscience Clauses and the Effect on
Religious Affiliated Hospitals and Health Care Practitioners.- Chapter 25:
Title: A Very Private, Very Public Matter: Contraception and Religious
Freedom.- Chapter 26: Religion and Education: A New Birth of Freedom for
Unsettled Times.- Chapter 27: The Global State Church: The Political and
Security Roles of Religion in Contemporary Education.- Chapter 28: Sexual
Identity, Gender Ideology, and Religious Freedom: The Tug of War over "Who
We Are" Schools as Battlegrounds.- Part 4: Religion and the State in
Canada, Mexico, and South America.- Chapter 29: Religion and State in
Canada Janet Epp Buckingham.- Chapter 30: Religion and State in Mexico
Roberto Blancart.- Chapter 31: Religion and State in Colombia.- Chapter 32:
Religion and State in Argentina.- Chapter 33: Religion and State in Brazil
Rodrigo Alves, The Brazilian Center of Studies in Law and Religion.-
Chapter 34: Religion and State in Chile.- Chapter 35: Religion and State in
the Caribbean.
Religious Reasons in Political Discourse.- Chapter 3: A Plantingan Response
to Public Reason Accessibilism.- Chapter 4: Matters of Conscience.- Chapter
5: On the Definition of Religious Belief.- Chapter 6: Natural Law and the
American Founding.- Part 2: Religion and the American Constitutional
Experiment.- Chapter 7: Why Do We Think the Framers Wanted to Separate
Church and State?- Chapter 8: American Church - State Relations:
Jefferson's Conception of Religious Freedom.- Chapter 9: A Liberal and
Generous Toleration: John Adams and the Freedom for Religion.- Chapter 10:
Nondiscrimination or Accommodation?: Two Competing Visions of the Free
Exercise Clause.- Chapter 11: In Praise of Separationism: A Lamentation on
the Demise of that Famous Paragraph in Everson v. Board of Education.-
Chapter 12: The Requirement of Church and State to be Forever Separate.-
Chapter 13: Why Church and State Should be Kept Separatebut Politics and
Religion Should Not.- Chapter 14: Is Religion Serious Enough to Be Taken
Seriously?- Chapter 15: Does the Separation of Church and State Require
Secularism?- Chapter 16: Miltonic Liberty and the Grounds for
Disestablishment in A Treatise of Civil Power.- Chapter 17: A Marriage of
Opposites: Tocqueville on Religion and Democracy.- Chapter 18: Public
Spirit as Mediating Influence Between Tocqueville's "Spirit of Religion"
and "Spirit of Freedom".- Part 3: Religion and Law in the American Courts.-
Chapter 19: Testing Neutrality: The Courts' Use of Legal Tests in
Determining Establishment and Free Exercise Cases.- Chapter 20: Corporate
Religious Liberty After Hobby Lobby.- Chapter 21: The Ministerial Exception
and the Distinction between Church and State.- Chapter 22: The Definition
of Marriage from Reynolds to Obergefell.- Chapter 23: The Separation of
Church and State: The Court's 'Secular Purpose' and the Argumentum ex
Ignorantia.- Chapter 24: Changes in Conscience Clauses and the Effect on
Religious Affiliated Hospitals and Health Care Practitioners.- Chapter 25:
Title: A Very Private, Very Public Matter: Contraception and Religious
Freedom.- Chapter 26: Religion and Education: A New Birth of Freedom for
Unsettled Times.- Chapter 27: The Global State Church: The Political and
Security Roles of Religion in Contemporary Education.- Chapter 28: Sexual
Identity, Gender Ideology, and Religious Freedom: The Tug of War over "Who
We Are" Schools as Battlegrounds.- Part 4: Religion and the State in
Canada, Mexico, and South America.- Chapter 29: Religion and State in
Canada Janet Epp Buckingham.- Chapter 30: Religion and State in Mexico
Roberto Blancart.- Chapter 31: Religion and State in Colombia.- Chapter 32:
Religion and State in Argentina.- Chapter 33: Religion and State in Brazil
Rodrigo Alves, The Brazilian Center of Studies in Law and Religion.-
Chapter 34: Religion and State in Chile.- Chapter 35: Religion and State in
the Caribbean.
1: Introduction.- Part 1: Religion and State in Philosophy.- Chapter 2:
Religious Reasons in Political Discourse.- Chapter 3: A Plantingan Response
to Public Reason Accessibilism.- Chapter 4: Matters of Conscience.- Chapter
5: On the Definition of Religious Belief.- Chapter 6: Natural Law and the
American Founding.- Part 2: Religion and the American Constitutional
Experiment.- Chapter 7: Why Do We Think the Framers Wanted to Separate
Church and State?- Chapter 8: American Church - State Relations:
Jefferson's Conception of Religious Freedom.- Chapter 9: A Liberal and
Generous Toleration: John Adams and the Freedom for Religion.- Chapter 10:
Nondiscrimination or Accommodation?: Two Competing Visions of the Free
Exercise Clause.- Chapter 11: In Praise of Separationism: A Lamentation on
the Demise of that Famous Paragraph in Everson v. Board of Education.-
Chapter 12: The Requirement of Church and State to be Forever Separate.-
Chapter 13: Why Church and State Should be Kept Separatebut Politics and
Religion Should Not.- Chapter 14: Is Religion Serious Enough to Be Taken
Seriously?- Chapter 15: Does the Separation of Church and State Require
Secularism?- Chapter 16: Miltonic Liberty and the Grounds for
Disestablishment in A Treatise of Civil Power.- Chapter 17: A Marriage of
Opposites: Tocqueville on Religion and Democracy.- Chapter 18: Public
Spirit as Mediating Influence Between Tocqueville's "Spirit of Religion"
and "Spirit of Freedom".- Part 3: Religion and Law in the American Courts.-
Chapter 19: Testing Neutrality: The Courts' Use of Legal Tests in
Determining Establishment and Free Exercise Cases.- Chapter 20: Corporate
Religious Liberty After Hobby Lobby.- Chapter 21: The Ministerial Exception
and the Distinction between Church and State.- Chapter 22: The Definition
of Marriage from Reynolds to Obergefell.- Chapter 23: The Separation of
Church and State: The Court's 'Secular Purpose' and the Argumentum ex
Ignorantia.- Chapter 24: Changes in Conscience Clauses and the Effect on
Religious Affiliated Hospitals and Health Care Practitioners.- Chapter 25:
Title: A Very Private, Very Public Matter: Contraception and Religious
Freedom.- Chapter 26: Religion and Education: A New Birth of Freedom for
Unsettled Times.- Chapter 27: The Global State Church: The Political and
Security Roles of Religion in Contemporary Education.- Chapter 28: Sexual
Identity, Gender Ideology, and Religious Freedom: The Tug of War over "Who
We Are" Schools as Battlegrounds.- Part 4: Religion and the State in
Canada, Mexico, and South America.- Chapter 29: Religion and State in
Canada Janet Epp Buckingham.- Chapter 30: Religion and State in Mexico
Roberto Blancart.- Chapter 31: Religion and State in Colombia.- Chapter 32:
Religion and State in Argentina.- Chapter 33: Religion and State in Brazil
Rodrigo Alves, The Brazilian Center of Studies in Law and Religion.-
Chapter 34: Religion and State in Chile.- Chapter 35: Religion and State in
the Caribbean.
Religious Reasons in Political Discourse.- Chapter 3: A Plantingan Response
to Public Reason Accessibilism.- Chapter 4: Matters of Conscience.- Chapter
5: On the Definition of Religious Belief.- Chapter 6: Natural Law and the
American Founding.- Part 2: Religion and the American Constitutional
Experiment.- Chapter 7: Why Do We Think the Framers Wanted to Separate
Church and State?- Chapter 8: American Church - State Relations:
Jefferson's Conception of Religious Freedom.- Chapter 9: A Liberal and
Generous Toleration: John Adams and the Freedom for Religion.- Chapter 10:
Nondiscrimination or Accommodation?: Two Competing Visions of the Free
Exercise Clause.- Chapter 11: In Praise of Separationism: A Lamentation on
the Demise of that Famous Paragraph in Everson v. Board of Education.-
Chapter 12: The Requirement of Church and State to be Forever Separate.-
Chapter 13: Why Church and State Should be Kept Separatebut Politics and
Religion Should Not.- Chapter 14: Is Religion Serious Enough to Be Taken
Seriously?- Chapter 15: Does the Separation of Church and State Require
Secularism?- Chapter 16: Miltonic Liberty and the Grounds for
Disestablishment in A Treatise of Civil Power.- Chapter 17: A Marriage of
Opposites: Tocqueville on Religion and Democracy.- Chapter 18: Public
Spirit as Mediating Influence Between Tocqueville's "Spirit of Religion"
and "Spirit of Freedom".- Part 3: Religion and Law in the American Courts.-
Chapter 19: Testing Neutrality: The Courts' Use of Legal Tests in
Determining Establishment and Free Exercise Cases.- Chapter 20: Corporate
Religious Liberty After Hobby Lobby.- Chapter 21: The Ministerial Exception
and the Distinction between Church and State.- Chapter 22: The Definition
of Marriage from Reynolds to Obergefell.- Chapter 23: The Separation of
Church and State: The Court's 'Secular Purpose' and the Argumentum ex
Ignorantia.- Chapter 24: Changes in Conscience Clauses and the Effect on
Religious Affiliated Hospitals and Health Care Practitioners.- Chapter 25:
Title: A Very Private, Very Public Matter: Contraception and Religious
Freedom.- Chapter 26: Religion and Education: A New Birth of Freedom for
Unsettled Times.- Chapter 27: The Global State Church: The Political and
Security Roles of Religion in Contemporary Education.- Chapter 28: Sexual
Identity, Gender Ideology, and Religious Freedom: The Tug of War over "Who
We Are" Schools as Battlegrounds.- Part 4: Religion and the State in
Canada, Mexico, and South America.- Chapter 29: Religion and State in
Canada Janet Epp Buckingham.- Chapter 30: Religion and State in Mexico
Roberto Blancart.- Chapter 31: Religion and State in Colombia.- Chapter 32:
Religion and State in Argentina.- Chapter 33: Religion and State in Brazil
Rodrigo Alves, The Brazilian Center of Studies in Law and Religion.-
Chapter 34: Religion and State in Chile.- Chapter 35: Religion and State in
the Caribbean.