Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. “Where Justice Is Called a Virtue”: Public Reason and Civic Formation in Thomas Hobbes
2. Compact Before Liberal Constructivism: The Divine Politics of John Locke
3. Governing Subjects and Breeding Citizens: Dilemmas of Public Reasoning and Public Judgment in Locke
4. Rousseau’s Contractarian Republic: The Culture of Constitutional Self-Government
5. John Rawls, Public Reason, and Transformative Liberalism Today
Conclusion: The Politics of Not Settling Down
Bibliography
Index