John Colman is associate professor of politics, Ave Maria University, and author of Lucretius as Theorist of Political Life.
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Description
List of Abbreviations Acknowledgments Introduction: Religious Liberty, Free Inquiry, and the Problem of Orthodoxy 1. The Crisis of Liberalism and the Return of Orthodoxy 2. Toward a Theology of Liberalism: Locke's Reasonableness of Christianity 3. Benjamin Franklin and the Hemphill Affair: Making Good Citizens, Not Good Presbyterians 4. James Madison and the Ambition of Making Laws for the Human Mind 5. Diamonds from Dunghills: Jefferson's Materialism, Free Inquiry, and Religious Reform Conclusion Notes Bibliography Index
John Colman returns to John Locke and three thinkers he calls Locke's 'American Students' to mount a counteroffensive against the recent upsurge of illiberal thinking. Colman's readings of Benjamin Franklin, James Madison, and Thomas Jefferson are astute and subtle; his case on behalf of their positions on religious liberty and free inquiry well-informed and persuasive." - Michael Zuckert, Nancy R. Dreux Professor of Political Science at Notre Dame and author of A Nation So Conceived: Abraham Lincoln and the Paradox of Democratic Sovereignty

