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Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Theology and the American Civil Conversation
Part I: Charles Taylor, “Perils of Moralism” and Responses
1 Perils of Moralism
2 Ockham’s Children: Nomolatry, Nominalism, and Contemporary Moral Culture
3 Nomolatry and Fidelity
4 Moralism and Its Traps
Part II: Nicholas Wolterstorff, “The Authorities Are God’s Servants”: Is a Theistic Account of Political Authority Still Viable or Have Humanist Accounts Won the Day? and Responses
5 "The Authorities Are God’s Servants": Is a Theistic Account of Political Authority Still Viable or Have Humanist Accounts Won the Day?
6 Two Theories, Not One
7 On the Origin and Nature of Political Authority: A Response to Nicholas Wolterstorff
8 Is Consent a Theological Category?
Part III: Robin W. Lovin, “Consensus and Commitment: Real People, Religious Reasons, and Public Discourse” and Responses
9 Consensus and Commitment: Real People, Religious Reasons, and Public Discourse
10 Re-framing the Conversation
11 Why We Can Talk to Each Other: A Response to Robin Lovin
12 Liberal Democracy: An Alternative to the Idolotry of the Nation State?
Part IV: Jean Porter, “Moral Traditions” and Responses
13 Moral Traditions
14 Adjudicating Moral Inquiry: Scientific Reason and/or Dialogical Encounters
15 Alasdair MacIntyre: Closet Liberal
16 Taking the American Moral Tradition SeriouslyI develop these ideas in “The Liberal Spirit in America,” Policy Review (August and September 2003): 29–47.
17 Epilogue
Index
About the Contributors and Editors
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