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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: John Corvino (, Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan) , Sherif Girgis , Ryan T. Anderson (, The Heritage Foundation)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 20.60cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 13.70cm Weight: 0.476kg ISBN: 9780190603076ISBN 10: 0190603070 Pages: 352 Publication Date: 27 July 2017 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsSection I. Introduction: New Challenges, Old Questions Ryan T. Anderson, John Corvino, and Sherif Girgis Section II. Religious Liberty, Not Religious Privilege John Corvino 1. Religious Liberty and Religious Privilege: Some Context 2. The Trouble with Today's Religious Exemptions 3. Why Religious Exemptions? 4. Discrimination and the Law 5. Bigotry and Social Pressure 6. Conclusion Section III. Against the New Puritanism: Empowering All, Encumbering None Ryan T. Anderson and Sherif Girgis 1. Public Policy after Same-Sex Marriage 2. Ethics and Politics 3. Religion and Conscience, Civil Society and Pluralism 4. Our First Freedom at Work 5. Dignity, Discrimination, and Coercion 6. Antidiscrimination Laws 7. Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Laws: A Challenge to Supporters Section IV. Reply to Anderson and Girgis John Corvino 1. Moral and Religious Integrity 2. Limited Government versus Exemptions from Laws 3. Sexual-Orientation and Gender-Identity Discrimination Section V. Reply to Corvino Ryan T. Anderson and Sherif Girgis 1. Legislation and Exemptions 2. Discrimination 3. Integrity Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index About the AuthorsReviewsIn our deeply divided nation, DEBATING RELIGIOUS LIBERTY AND DISCRIMINATION is a refreshing and hope-inspiring book. Provocative, clear, careful in argument, searching in coverage, it shows that people who strongly disagree can both find much common ground and also articulate their differences with respect and care, fostering a community of reason. It will be a wonderful book for undergraduate teaching, but it is also challenging for people well-versed in the subject, whether they agree or disagree. * martha C. Nussbaum, School of Law and Department of Philosophy, The University of Chicago * ... all three authors deserve praise for tackling this subject in this way. They disagree civilly and engage with one another substantively and thoughtfully. In an age when discussions of religious liberty often devolve into cheap political point-scoring, the fact that elevated debate occurred with both charity and clarity is perhaps the ultimate value of this book. May it be a model to disputants on this and other heated subjects, for years to come. * The Weekly Standard * Debating Religious Liberty and Discrimination ... raises the plausibility of living with greater diversity of thought on fundamental issues in civil society. Learning to tolerate religious disagreement has been a signal achievement of liberal societies, and if we can live together with mutually exclusive but also reciprocally respectful religious systems thriving in civil society, why can't we expand the scope of that tolerance to include other moral and social issues that divide us? * LA Review of Books * ...the U.S. remains a large country with citizens of many religions, diametrically opposed opinions, and lifestyles that will inevitably clash. Given that conflict is unavoidable, the authors agree that we ought to foster a culture in which we can seek common ground and conduct debate on the plane of ideas and policy, rather than descend into endless painful lawsuits or bitter social-media feuds with our ideological opponents. Corvino, Anderson, and Girgis illustrate in this compelling book that such a judicious debate can take place and can generate fruitful conversation, as well as delineate areas of authentic agreement and practical compromise. And, perhaps even better than that, they give us the tools we can use to find those agreements and compromises ourselves. * National Review * In our deeply divided nation, DEBATING RELIGIOUS LIBERTY AND DISCRIMINATION is a refreshing and hope-inspiring book. Provocative, clear, careful in argument, searching in coverage, it shows that people who strongly disagree can both find much common ground and also articulate their differences with respect and care, fostering a community of reason. It will be a wonderful book for undergraduate teaching, but it is also challenging for people well-versed in the subject, whether they agree or disagree. John Corvino's wonderful essay, for example, is leading me to rethink some of my own positions, and will surely be part of my next law school class on this topic. Martha C. Nussbaum, School of Law and Department of Philosophy, The University of Chicago In our deeply divided nation, DEBATING RELIGIOUS LIBERTY AND DISCRIMINATION is a refreshing and hope-inspiring book. Provocative, clear, careful in argument, searching in coverage, it shows that people who strongly disagree can both find much common ground and also articulate their differences with respect and care, fostering a community of reason. It will be a wonderful book for undergraduate teaching, but it is also challenging for people well-versed in the subject, whether they agree or disagree. martha C. Nussbaum, School of Law and Department of Philosophy, The University of Chicago Though the authors test the boundaries, they remain within the assumptions of American constitutional discourse and achieve a well-organized, clear, and civil exploration of the issues. * Sotirios A. Barber, The Review of Politics * In our deeply divided nation, Debating Religious Liberty and Discrimination is a refreshing and hope-inspiring book. Provocative, clear, careful in argument, searching in coverage, it shows that people who strongly disagree can both find much common ground and also articulate their differences with respect and care, fostering a community of reason. It will be a wonderful book for undergraduate teaching, but it is also challenging for people well-versed in the subject, whether they agree or disagree. * Martha C. Nussbaum, School of Law and Department of Philosophy, The University of Chicago * ... all three authors deserve praise for tackling this subject in this way. They disagree civilly and engage with one another substantively and thoughtfully. In an age when discussions of religious liberty often devolve into cheap political point-scoring, the fact that elevated debate occurred with both charity and clarity is perhaps the ultimate value of this book. May it be a model to disputants on this and other heated subjects, for years to come. * The Weekly Standard * Debating Religious Liberty and Discrimination ... raises the plausibility of living with greater diversity of thought on fundamental issues in civil society. Learning to tolerate religious disagreement has been a signal achievement of liberal societies, and if we can live together with mutually exclusive but also reciprocally respectful religious systems thriving in civil society, why can't we expand the scope of that tolerance to include other moral and social issues that divide us? * LA Review of Books * ...the U.S. remains a large country with citizens of many religions, diametrically opposed opinions, and lifestyles that will inevitably clash. Given that conflict is unavoidable, the authors agree that we ought to foster a culture in which we can seek common ground and conduct debate on the plane of ideas and policy, rather than descend into endless painful lawsuits or bitter social-media feuds with our ideological opponents. Corvino, Anderson, and Girgis illustrate in this compelling book that such a judicious debate can take place and can generate fruitful conversation, as well as delineate areas of authentic agreement and practical compromise. And, perhaps even better than that, they give us the tools we can use to find those agreements and compromises ourselves. * National Review * Overall, this book is a thought-provoking endeavour, and it is commendable that the authors have tried to challenge one another and to find areas of agreement. Their willingness to reach out and engage in reasoned debate is valuable in and of itself. * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews * Author InformationJohn Corvino, Ph.D. is Professor and Chair of the Philosophy Department at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. He is the co-author (with Maggie Gallagher) of Debating Same-Sex Marriage (June 2012) and the author of What's Wrong with Homosexuality? (January 2013), both from Oxford University Press. Ryan T. Anderson, Ph.D., is William E. Simon Senior Research Fellow at The Heritage Foundation. He is author of Truth Overruled: The Future of Marriage and Religious Freedom (Regnery, 2015), co-author of What Is Marriage? Man and Woman: A Defense (Encounter, 2012) and co-editor of A Liberalism Safe for Catholicism (University of Notre Dame Press, 2017). Sherif Girgis, J.D., is a Ph.D. candidate in philosophy at Princeton and lead author (with Ryan T. Anderson and Robert P. George) of What Is Marriage? Man and Woman: A Defense (Encounter Books, 2012). He earned a law degree from Yale and a B.Phil. (M.Phil.) in philosophy from Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |