Religious Conviction, Respect, and the Doctrine of Restraint in the Exclusionist-Inclusionist Debate

<p>The principle of respect for other persons is commonly invoked in contemporary liberalism as justification for the claim that a conscientious citizen in a liberal democracy is morally obligated to refrain from supporting a coercive law for which he lacks suitable public justification. This...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McWatters III, Thomas A.
Other Authors: Golding, Martin P.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/2485
id ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-2485
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-24852013-01-07T20:07:34ZReligious Conviction, Respect, and the Doctrine of Restraint in the Exclusionist-Inclusionist DebateMcWatters III, Thomas A.PhilosophyContemporary liberalismDoctrine of restraintPublic squareReligious convictionRespect<p>The principle of respect for other persons is commonly invoked in contemporary liberalism as justification for the claim that a conscientious citizen in a liberal democracy is morally obligated to refrain from supporting a coercive law for which he lacks suitable public justification. This view has been challenged by Christopher Eberle in <italics>Religious Conviction in Liberal Politics</italics>, who argues that although a citizen has an obligation to pursue a convincing secular rationale for a coercive law, he does not have an obligation to withhold support for a law for which he lacks such a rationale.</p> <p>In this dissertation I attempt to develop a basic analytical framework which can be used to formulate a suitable conception of respect for persons in the public square. Only with such an underlying conception of respect in hand is it possible to adjudicate the competing claims concerning what the principle of respect for persons should be deemed to require of citizens in advocating and supporting coercive laws.</p> <p>The framework I propose views respect for persons as a complex and variegated concept. It separately considers four different forms or notions of respect, and takes the attitude of respect as foundational and prior to the other forms of respect. I conclude that any conception of respect will entail commitment to a broader ethical theory or set of ethical principles. Accordingly, in the final chapter, I suggest that Robert Audi's "value-based Kantian intuitionism," with its emphasis on respect and the dignity of persons as a grounding property, may constitute an auspicious ethical theory to which appeal may plausibly be made in completing a conception of respect.</p>DissertationGolding, Martin P.2010Dissertation932878 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/2485en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Philosophy
Contemporary liberalism
Doctrine of restraint
Public square
Religious conviction
Respect
spellingShingle Philosophy
Contemporary liberalism
Doctrine of restraint
Public square
Religious conviction
Respect
McWatters III, Thomas A.
Religious Conviction, Respect, and the Doctrine of Restraint in the Exclusionist-Inclusionist Debate
description <p>The principle of respect for other persons is commonly invoked in contemporary liberalism as justification for the claim that a conscientious citizen in a liberal democracy is morally obligated to refrain from supporting a coercive law for which he lacks suitable public justification. This view has been challenged by Christopher Eberle in <italics>Religious Conviction in Liberal Politics</italics>, who argues that although a citizen has an obligation to pursue a convincing secular rationale for a coercive law, he does not have an obligation to withhold support for a law for which he lacks such a rationale.</p> <p>In this dissertation I attempt to develop a basic analytical framework which can be used to formulate a suitable conception of respect for persons in the public square. Only with such an underlying conception of respect in hand is it possible to adjudicate the competing claims concerning what the principle of respect for persons should be deemed to require of citizens in advocating and supporting coercive laws.</p> <p>The framework I propose views respect for persons as a complex and variegated concept. It separately considers four different forms or notions of respect, and takes the attitude of respect as foundational and prior to the other forms of respect. I conclude that any conception of respect will entail commitment to a broader ethical theory or set of ethical principles. Accordingly, in the final chapter, I suggest that Robert Audi's "value-based Kantian intuitionism," with its emphasis on respect and the dignity of persons as a grounding property, may constitute an auspicious ethical theory to which appeal may plausibly be made in completing a conception of respect.</p> === Dissertation
author2 Golding, Martin P.
author_facet Golding, Martin P.
McWatters III, Thomas A.
author McWatters III, Thomas A.
author_sort McWatters III, Thomas A.
title Religious Conviction, Respect, and the Doctrine of Restraint in the Exclusionist-Inclusionist Debate
title_short Religious Conviction, Respect, and the Doctrine of Restraint in the Exclusionist-Inclusionist Debate
title_full Religious Conviction, Respect, and the Doctrine of Restraint in the Exclusionist-Inclusionist Debate
title_fullStr Religious Conviction, Respect, and the Doctrine of Restraint in the Exclusionist-Inclusionist Debate
title_full_unstemmed Religious Conviction, Respect, and the Doctrine of Restraint in the Exclusionist-Inclusionist Debate
title_sort religious conviction, respect, and the doctrine of restraint in the exclusionist-inclusionist debate
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/2485
work_keys_str_mv AT mcwattersiiithomasa religiousconvictionrespectandthedoctrineofrestraintintheexclusionistinclusionistdebate
_version_ 1716473493150760960