The Limits of Religious Tolerance
Abstract
Religion’s place in American public life has never been fixed. As new communities have arrived, as old traditions have fractured and reformed, as cultural norms have been shaped by shifting economic structures and the advance of science, and as new faith traditions have expanded the range of religious confessions within America’s religious landscape, the claims posited by religious faiths—and the respect such claims may demand—have been subjects of near-constant change. In The Limits of Religious Tolerance, Alan Jay Levinovitz pushes against the widely held (and often unexamined) notion that unbounded tolerance must and should be accorded to claims forwarded on the basis of religious belief in a society increasingly characterized by religious pluralism. Pressing at the distinction between tolerance and respect, Levinovitz seeks to offer a set of guideposts by which a democratic society could identify and observe a set of limits beyond which religiously grounded claims may legitimately be denied the expectation of unqualified non-interference.
Keywords
Religious tolerance -- United States.DOI
10.3998/mpub.10033802ISBN
9781943208043, 9781943208050, 9781943208050Publisher
Amherst College PressPublisher website
https://acpress.amherst.edu/Publication date and place
2016Imprint
Amherst College PressClassification
Religion and beliefs
Religion and politics
Religious intolerance, persecution and conflict