2 posts tagged with Philosophy by monju_bosatsu.
Displaying 1 through 2 of 2.

Related tags:
+ (75)
+ (47)
+ (35)
+ (34)
+ (26)
+ (24)
+ (24)
+ (23)
+ (23)
+ (21)
+ (21)
+ (20)
+ (19)
+ (19)
+ (19)
+ (17)
+ (16)
+ (14)
+ (14)
+ (14)
+ (14)
+ (14)
+ (13)
+ (13)
+ (13)
+ (12)
+ (12)
+ (12)
+ (12)
+ (12)
+ (11)
+ (11)
+ (10)
+ (10)
+ (10)
+ (10)
+ (10)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (9)
+ (8)
+ (8)
+ (8)
+ (8)
+ (8)
+ (8)
+ (8)
+ (8)
+ (7)
+ (7)
+ (7)
+ (7)
+ (7)
+ (7)
+ (7)
+ (7)
+ (7)
+ (7)


Users that often use this tag:
homunculus (38)
anotherpanacea (22)
Gyan (19)
kliuless (17)
y2karl (13)
painquale (13)
shivohum (9)
empath (6)
Kattullus (6)
semmi (5)
0bvious (5)
Trurl (4)
cthuljew (4)
Rhaomi (4)
Joe Beese (4)
LobsterMitten (4)
nasreddin (4)
daksya (4)
escabeche (4)
matteo (4)
netbros (4)
the man of twists ... (4)
Tlogmer (3)
MiguelCardoso (3)
Sticherbeast (3)
moonbird (3)
Brandon Blatcher (3)
Wolfdog (3)
Blazecock Pileon (3)
ageispolis (3)
amyms (3)
Obscure Reference (3)
ornate insect (3)
Lutoslawski (3)
troll (3)
Jonathan Livengood (3)
philipy (2)
Rory Marinich (2)
MultiplyDrafted (2)
colinmarshall (2)
Potomac Avenue (2)
daniel_charms (2)
fearfulsymmetry (2)
hydatius (2)
l33tpolicywonk (2)
Abiezer (2)
saulgoodman (2)
jason's_planet (2)
grobstein (2)
scalefree (2)
MetaMonkey (2)
voltairemodern (2)
infini (2)
Roach (2)
zarq (2)
fleetmouse (2)
The Thnikkaman (2)
kenko (2)
TheophileEscargot (2)
swift (2)

Principled Toleration of Religion

Why Tolerate Religion? Brian Leiter's new paper on the philosophical and legal justifications for toleration of religion. From the abstract: Religious toleration has long been the paradigm of the liberal ideal of toleration of group differences, as reflected in both the constitutions of the major Western democracies and in the theoretical literature explaining and justifying these practices. While the historical reasons for the special “pride of place” accorded religious toleration are familiar, what is surprising is that no one has been able to articulate a credible principled argument for tolerating religion qua religion: that is, an argument that would explain why, as a matter of moral or other principle, we ought to accord special legal and moral treatment to religious practices. There are, to be sure, principled arguments for why the state ought to tolerate a plethora of private choices, commitments, and practices of its citizenry, but none of these single out religion for anything like the special treatment it is accorded in, for example, American and Canadian constitutional law. So why tolerate religion? Not because of anything that has to do with it being religion as such - or so this paper argues.
posted by monju_bosatsu on May 30, 2006 - 126 comments

 

Classics of Early Modern Philosophy, translated.

Early Modern Texts. Versions of some classics of early modern philosophy, prepared with a view to making them easier to read while leaving the main arguments, doctrines, and lines of thought intact. Recently added: John Locke's Second Treatise of Government. Via Crooked Timber.
posted by monju_bosatsu on Feb 28, 2005 - 6 comments

Page: 1