CONTENTS

Preface

MELISSA S. WILLIAMS

Contributors

Introduction

JEREMY WALDRON AND MELISSA S. WILLIAMS

PART I: TOLERATION IN THE WESTERN CANON OF
POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY

1. Hobbes on Public Worship

JEREMY WALDRON

2. Spinoza on Why the Sovereign Can Command Men’s Tongues but Not Their Minds

MICHAEL A. ROSENTHAL

3. Pierre Bayle’s Reflexive Theory of Toleration

RAINER FORST

4. Locke’s Main Argument for Toleration

ALEX TUCKNESS

5. The Mode and Limits of John Stuart Mill’s Toleration

GLYN MORGAN

PART II: TOLERATION AND VIRTUE

6. Is Toleration a Political Virtue?

DAVID HEYD

7. Forbearant and Engaged Toleration: A Comment on David Heyd

KATHRYN ABRAMS

8. “Virtuous to Himself”: Pluralistic Democracy and the Toleration of Tolerations

ANDREW SABL

PART III: LIBERAL TOLERATION

9. Toleration and Liberal Commitments

STEVEN D. SMITH

10. Toleration and Truth: Comments on Steven D. Smith

RAINER FORST

11. How Impoverishing Is Liberalism? A Comment on Steven D. Smith

GLYN MORGAN

12. Is There Logical Space on the Moral Map for Toleration? A Brief Comment on Smith, Morgan, and Forst

LAWRENCE A. ALEXANDER

PART IV: TOLERATION AND IDENTITY

13. Toleration, Politics, and the Role of Mutuality

INGRID CREPPELL

14. Toleration, Politics, and the Role of Murality

GLEN NEWEY

15. Morality, Self-interest, and the Politics of Toleration

NOAH FELDMAN

16. Tolerance as/in Civilizational Discourse

WENDY BROWN

Index