Abstract

Abstract The proper role of religious arguments in politics is the subject of intense controversy in the United States. The controversy comprises two inquiries: a debate about the constitutionally proper role of such arguments in politics and a related but distinct debate about their morally proper role. In the preceding chapter, I addressed the question of the constitutionally proper (permissible) role of religious arguments in American politics; in this and the next chapter, I address the question of the morally proper role of such arguments in politics. Because it focused on the constitutional law of the United States, the preceding chapter was relevant to questions about “religion in politics” as they arise in the United States.

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