Beyond belief, beyond conscience: the radical significance of the free exercise of religion

Introduction : The View from Monticello and Montpelier -- The Burden of Toleration -- The Liberty of Conscience and Conversion -- The Revolutionary Legacy : Jefferson's and Madison's Great Project -- The Democratization of Religious Freedom -- An Era of Doctrines

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rakove, Jack N. 1947- (Author)
Format: Electronic Book
Language:English
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Published: New York, NY, United States of America Oxford University Press [2020]
In:Year: 2020
Reviews:[Rezension von: Rakove, Jack N., 1947-, Beyond belief, beyond conscience] (2022) (Bennett, Daniel)
Series/Journal:Inalienable rights
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B USA / Freedom of religion / Liberty of religious exercise / Religious freedom
Further subjects:B Freedom Of Religion (United States)
Online Access: Table of Contents
Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
Parallel Edition:Non-electronic
Description
Summary:Introduction : The View from Monticello and Montpelier -- The Burden of Toleration -- The Liberty of Conscience and Conversion -- The Revolutionary Legacy : Jefferson's and Madison's Great Project -- The Democratization of Religious Freedom -- An Era of Doctrines
"Some time back in the early '00s, when-thanks to Dean John Sexton, my good friends Larry Kramer and John Ferejohn, and other colleagues-I used to hang out at New York University Law School, I had lunch one day with Dedi Felman, who was then a legal editor at Oxford University Press. We discussed her idea of doing a series of short provocative books on problems of rights in American constitutional history. When Geoffrey Stone of the University of Chicago (my literal birthplace) took over editing The Unalienable Rights series that Dedi organized, I quickly staked a claim to the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment. This interest reflected a longstanding concern with James Madison, dating to my dissertation work in the early 1970s, and other projects I had pursued since, including the problem of how one discusses the original meaning of the Constitution. The idea of religious freedom was a seminal element in the development of Madison's constitutional ideas. Equally important, the two components of the Religion Clause illustrated two landmark aspects of American constitutional practice. The free exercise of religion is a right different from all other rights because of the degree of moral autonomy it invests in each and every one of us. And the disestablishment of religion, by depriving the state of the power of regulating religion, offers the best example of the basic idea that the legislative authority government exercises depends on the will of a sovereign people. These are points we do not readily grasp. In part because contemporary Religion Clause jurisprudence is such a messy and vexed subject, and in part because justices and judges often prefer resolving claims of conscience on general grounds of freedom of speech, this original significance of "the religion question" often escapes attention. The subtitle of this book rests on my conviction that a historically grounded approach to this subject would be of some value to legal scholars. Among other things, that approach involves asking how we should compare the gradual development of European modes of religious tolerance with the emerging American conviction that the free exercise of religion was no longer a matter of mere toleration."--
Item Description:Enthält Sachregister
ISBN:0190086572