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Digital
A Dialogue between John Smith and Thomas Brown, two fellow-apprentices : with a particular character of each.
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Year: 1820 Publisher: [S.l. s.n.]

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Digital
The dispute adjusted, about the proper time of applying for a repeal of the Corporation and Test Acts : by shewing, that no time is proper.
Authors: ---
Year: 1790 Publisher: Oxford Now republished at the Clarendon Press, sold by D. Prince and J. Cooke [and 2 others]


Digital
An address to the public, in which an answer is given to the principal objections urged in the House of Commons, by the Right Hon Frederick Lord North, (now Earl of Guildford) and the Right Hon William Pitt, against the repeal of the test laws : and the consequences of an injudicious concession on the part of the advocates for the claim of the Protestant dissenters stated : with occasional remarks
Authors: ---
Year: 1790 Publisher: Bath Printed by R. Cruttwell, and sold by J. Johnson [and 2 others]


Book
Post-liberal religious liberty
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ISBN: 9781108819145 9781108836500 9781108873796 1108819141 1108873790 110883650X 1108872964 1108873332 Year: 2020 Publisher: Cambridge Cambridge University Press

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Why should we care about religious liberty? Leading commentators, United Kingdom courts, and the European Court of Human Rights have de-emphasised the special importance of religious liberty. They frequently contend it falls within a more general concern for personal autonomy. In this liberal egalitarian account, religious liberty claims are often rejected when faced with competing individual interests - the neutral secular state must protect us against the liberty-constraining acts of religions. Joel Harrison challenges this account. He argues that it is rooted in a theologically derived narrative of secularisation: rather than being neutral, it rests on a specific construction of 'secular' and 'religious' spheres. This challenge makes space for an alternative theological, political, and legal vision. Drawing from Christian thought, from St Augustine to John Milbank, Harrison develops a post-liberal focus on association. Religious liberty, he argues, facilitates creating communities seeking solidarity, fraternity, and charity - goals that are central to our common good.

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