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Tables of Contents for Religion in the Public Square
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Preface
ix
 
Liberal Democracy and the Place of Religion in Politics
1
66
Robert Audi
Separation of Church and State as Addressed to the State
3
6
The Libertarian Principle
4
1
The Equalitarian Principle
5
1
The Neutrality Principle
6
3
Religious Obligation and Political Conduct
9
7
Grounds and Dimensions of Religious Obligation
10
2
The Mutual Independence of Religious Sources of Obligation
12
1
Connections among Religious and Secular Sources
13
3
Civic Virtue and Religious Conviction
16
8
Civic Virtue, Religious Commitment, and Moral Obligation
17
4
Theo-ethical Equilibrium
21
3
Some Principles and Practices of Civic Virtue
24
14
Secular Rationale
25
3
Secular Motivation
28
6
Civic Voice
34
1
The Mutual Integration of Civic and Religious Virtues
35
2
The Principle of Theo-ethical Equilibrium
37
1
Separation of Church and State as Addressed to the Church
38
9
Ecclesiastical Neutrality
39
6
Clerical Neutrality
45
2
Some Problems of Application
47
20
The Role of Religion in Decision and Discussion of Political Issues
67
54
Nicholas Wolterstorff
The Role of Citizen and Its Ethics
67
2
What Is a Liberal Democracy?
69
3
The Liberal Position
72
4
The Ethic of the Citizen and Restraints on Reason
76
2
Are Religious Reasons too Dangerous to Permit?
78
2
Locke's Version of the Liberal Position
80
10
Rawls's Version of the Liberal Position
90
6
Rawls's Attempt to Identify the Independent Source
96
6
Does the Source Yield the Principles Needed?
102
2
Is It Fair to Ask Everyone to Use the Source?
104
1
Rawls's Rationale
105
4
What Does Respect Require?
109
2
No Restraint on Religious Reasons
111
2
Do We Need Consensus?
113
1
The Consocial Position
114
2
Application to Public Officials
116
5
Wolterstorff on Religion, Politics, and the Liberal State
121
24
Robert Audi
Liberalism and Religion
121
8
Wolterstorff's Critique of the Liberalism of Locke and Rawls
129
10
Wolterstorff's Positive View of Religion and Politics
139
6
Audi on Religion, Politics, and Liberal Democracy
145
22
Nicholas Wolterstorff
Audi's Version of the Liberal Position
148
3
Audi's Rationale
151
6
Evaluation of the Rationale
157
4
Audi's Independent Source
161
3
In Summary
164
3
Religion, Politics, and Democracy: Closing Comments and Remaining Issues
167
8
Robert Audi
The Scope of Impartiality
167
1
Consensus versus Majority Preference as Democratic Standards
168
1
The Justification of Coercion
169
3
Liberal Democracy and Mutual Respect
172
1
Secular Reasons and Secular Motivation
173
2
Index
175
4
About the Authors
179