Civil Religion in Modern Political Philosophy

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780271086156

Machiavelli to Tocqueville

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Edited by Steven Frankel, Martin D. Yaffe
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PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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272

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Description

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. Machiavelli, Christianity, and Civil Religion

Timothy Sean Quinn

2. How Francis Bacon’s New Organon Co-opts Biblical Theology for His New Atlantis

Martin D. Yaffe

3. Leviathan’s Reconquest of the Christian Person for the State

Mark Shiffman

4. Reading Descartes’s Discours: The Fabulous Way from Philosophy to Science and Technology

Daniel Doneson

5. Will Wonders Never Cease? Spinoza’s Critique of Miracles

Steven Frankel

6. Liberalism and Christianity: Locke’s Use of the Bible in the Second Treatise

Nasser Behnegar

7. Montesquieu’s Machiavellian Account of Civil Religion

Andrea Radasanu

8. Montesquieu and Christianity in the American Project: The Moderate Spirit

Paul Carrese

9. Hume on Church Establishments: History, Moderation, and Liberty

Aaron Szymkowiak

10. Rousseau’s Civil Religion “Problem”

John Ray

11. How the Founders Agreed About Religious Freedom but Disagreed About the Separation of Church and State

Vincent Phillip Muñoz and Kevin Vance

12. Tocqueville on Religion and Democratic Character: Equality, Mediocrity, and Greatness

Aaron L. Herold

List of Contributors

Index



“The question of civil religion deserves our renewed interest, as we witness the longstanding assumptions of modern secularization being shaken. This excellent collection of essays on that old and timely subject brings out both the common assumptions and a range of controversies among liberalism’s founding thinkers. Add to the mix a healthy dose of disagreement among the essays’ authors, and there is much food for thought here.”

—J. Judd Owen, author of Making Religion Safe for Democracy: Transformation from Hobbes to Tocqueville

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