A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cham
Springer International Publishing AG
2020
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Schriftenreihe: | Palgrave Frontiers in Philosophy of Religion Ser
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Schlagworte: | |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (282 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9783030562113 |
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- About This Book -- Contents -- About the Author -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- 1 The Ethics of Corporate Religious Liberty -- 1.1 Corporate Religious Liberty in Context -- 1.2 Why Moral and Legal Subjects Matter -- 1.3 A Christian Ethical Perspective -- 1.4 The Task Ahead -- 2 Corporate Religious Liberty in Church Teachings -- 2.1 Religious Liberty as Christian -- 2.1.1 Catholic Social Teaching on Religious Liberty -- 2.1.2 The World Council of Churches on Religious Liberty -- 2.1.3 Summary -- 2.2 The Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.1 Catholic Social Teaching on the Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.2 Protestant Conceptions of the Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.3 Summary -- 2.3 Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.1 Ecumenical Statements Against the Contraceptive Mandate -- 2.3.2 A Catholic Perspective on Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.3 A Protestant Perspective on Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.4 Summary -- 2.4 Conclusion -- 3 Group Ontology and Skeptical Arguments -- 3.1 Justice Ginsburg and Group-Agency Elimination -- 3.1.1 Appropriation of Corporate Theory -- 3.1.2 Churches, For-Profit Corporations, and Religious Exercise -- 3.1.3 Christian Ethical Overlap -- 3.2 James D. Nelson and Group-Agency Reduction -- 3.2.1 Conscience Reconceived -- 3.2.2 Active Identification with Business -- 3.2.3 The Formation of Corporate Conscience -- 3.2.4 Summary of Ginsburg and Nelson -- 3.3 Schragger, Schwartzman, and Group-Agency Agnosticism -- 3.3.1 Dewey's Empirical Method of Rights Ascription -- 3.3.2 Conflation of Science and Morality -- 3.3.3 Correcting Dewey -- 3.3.4 A Political Liberal Approach -- 3.3.5 A Christian and Group-Ontological Contention -- 3.4 Conclusion -- 4 A Modest Account of Corporate Religious Liberty -- 4.1 Aquinas's Modest Group Realism -- 4.1.1 Group Realism and the Christian Tradition | |
505 | 8 | |a 4.1.2 Modest Group Agency in the Summa Theologiae -- 4.2 The "Anatomy" of Modest Group Agency -- 4.2.1 Groups as Social Actions -- 4.2.2 Particular and Standing Intentions -- 4.3 The Theory in Outline -- 4.3.1 Religious Actions and the Freedom of the Church -- 4.3.2 Religiously Motivated Secular Actions and Organizational Exemptions -- 4.4 Conclusion -- 5 Political Liberal and Theological Contentions -- 5.1 Political Liberal Challenges -- 5.1.1 The Individual-Group Divide -- 5.1.2 Bridging the Individual-Group Divide -- 5.1.3 The Primacy and Moral Use of Social Action -- 5.2 Theological Considerations -- 5.2.1 The Religious-Secular Distinction -- 5.2.2 Defining the Term Religious Institution -- 5.2.3 The Church as More Than Voluntary -- 5.3 Conclusion -- 6 Integrating the Strong Group Agency of the Church -- 6.1 The Church as Strong Group Agent -- 6.1.1 The Animation Requirement and Individual Consent -- 6.1.2 The Literalness Requirement and the Invisible Church -- 6.1.3 The Eucharist Makes the Church -- 6.2 Historical Episodes of Group-Agency Elimination -- 6.2.1 The Medieval Corpus Mysticum -- 6.2.2 Locke's "True Church" -- 6.2.3 Recovering Strong Group Realism for Rights Ascription -- 6.3 The Standard Argument -- 6.3.1 The Supernatural Personality of the Church -- 6.3.2 Integrating the Standard Argument -- 6.3.3 Corporation of the Presiding Bishop v. Amos -- 6.4 Conclusion -- 7 From Group Ontology to Christian Moral Reasoning -- 7.1 Modest Group Realism and Practical Reason -- 7.2 Strong Group Realism and Christian Moral Reasoning -- 7.3 Reflections on Current Legal Challenges -- 7.3.1 Public Accommodations -- 7.3.2 Clerical Sex Abuse -- 7.4 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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author | David, Edward A. |
author_facet | David, Edward A. |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | David, Edward A. |
author_variant | e a d ea ead |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV048224189 |
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contents | Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- About This Book -- Contents -- About the Author -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- 1 The Ethics of Corporate Religious Liberty -- 1.1 Corporate Religious Liberty in Context -- 1.2 Why Moral and Legal Subjects Matter -- 1.3 A Christian Ethical Perspective -- 1.4 The Task Ahead -- 2 Corporate Religious Liberty in Church Teachings -- 2.1 Religious Liberty as Christian -- 2.1.1 Catholic Social Teaching on Religious Liberty -- 2.1.2 The World Council of Churches on Religious Liberty -- 2.1.3 Summary -- 2.2 The Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.1 Catholic Social Teaching on the Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.2 Protestant Conceptions of the Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.3 Summary -- 2.3 Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.1 Ecumenical Statements Against the Contraceptive Mandate -- 2.3.2 A Catholic Perspective on Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.3 A Protestant Perspective on Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.4 Summary -- 2.4 Conclusion -- 3 Group Ontology and Skeptical Arguments -- 3.1 Justice Ginsburg and Group-Agency Elimination -- 3.1.1 Appropriation of Corporate Theory -- 3.1.2 Churches, For-Profit Corporations, and Religious Exercise -- 3.1.3 Christian Ethical Overlap -- 3.2 James D. Nelson and Group-Agency Reduction -- 3.2.1 Conscience Reconceived -- 3.2.2 Active Identification with Business -- 3.2.3 The Formation of Corporate Conscience -- 3.2.4 Summary of Ginsburg and Nelson -- 3.3 Schragger, Schwartzman, and Group-Agency Agnosticism -- 3.3.1 Dewey's Empirical Method of Rights Ascription -- 3.3.2 Conflation of Science and Morality -- 3.3.3 Correcting Dewey -- 3.3.4 A Political Liberal Approach -- 3.3.5 A Christian and Group-Ontological Contention -- 3.4 Conclusion -- 4 A Modest Account of Corporate Religious Liberty -- 4.1 Aquinas's Modest Group Realism -- 4.1.1 Group Realism and the Christian Tradition 4.1.2 Modest Group Agency in the Summa Theologiae -- 4.2 The "Anatomy" of Modest Group Agency -- 4.2.1 Groups as Social Actions -- 4.2.2 Particular and Standing Intentions -- 4.3 The Theory in Outline -- 4.3.1 Religious Actions and the Freedom of the Church -- 4.3.2 Religiously Motivated Secular Actions and Organizational Exemptions -- 4.4 Conclusion -- 5 Political Liberal and Theological Contentions -- 5.1 Political Liberal Challenges -- 5.1.1 The Individual-Group Divide -- 5.1.2 Bridging the Individual-Group Divide -- 5.1.3 The Primacy and Moral Use of Social Action -- 5.2 Theological Considerations -- 5.2.1 The Religious-Secular Distinction -- 5.2.2 Defining the Term Religious Institution -- 5.2.3 The Church as More Than Voluntary -- 5.3 Conclusion -- 6 Integrating the Strong Group Agency of the Church -- 6.1 The Church as Strong Group Agent -- 6.1.1 The Animation Requirement and Individual Consent -- 6.1.2 The Literalness Requirement and the Invisible Church -- 6.1.3 The Eucharist Makes the Church -- 6.2 Historical Episodes of Group-Agency Elimination -- 6.2.1 The Medieval Corpus Mysticum -- 6.2.2 Locke's "True Church" -- 6.2.3 Recovering Strong Group Realism for Rights Ascription -- 6.3 The Standard Argument -- 6.3.1 The Supernatural Personality of the Church -- 6.3.2 Integrating the Standard Argument -- 6.3.3 Corporation of the Presiding Bishop v. Amos -- 6.4 Conclusion -- 7 From Group Ontology to Christian Moral Reasoning -- 7.1 Modest Group Realism and Practical Reason -- 7.2 Strong Group Realism and Christian Moral Reasoning -- 7.3 Reflections on Current Legal Challenges -- 7.3.1 Public Accommodations -- 7.3.2 Clerical Sex Abuse -- 7.4 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index |
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spelling | David, Edward A. Verfasser aut A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty Cham Springer International Publishing AG 2020 ©2020 1 Online-Ressource (282 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Palgrave Frontiers in Philosophy of Religion Ser Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- About This Book -- Contents -- About the Author -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- 1 The Ethics of Corporate Religious Liberty -- 1.1 Corporate Religious Liberty in Context -- 1.2 Why Moral and Legal Subjects Matter -- 1.3 A Christian Ethical Perspective -- 1.4 The Task Ahead -- 2 Corporate Religious Liberty in Church Teachings -- 2.1 Religious Liberty as Christian -- 2.1.1 Catholic Social Teaching on Religious Liberty -- 2.1.2 The World Council of Churches on Religious Liberty -- 2.1.3 Summary -- 2.2 The Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.1 Catholic Social Teaching on the Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.2 Protestant Conceptions of the Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.3 Summary -- 2.3 Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.1 Ecumenical Statements Against the Contraceptive Mandate -- 2.3.2 A Catholic Perspective on Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.3 A Protestant Perspective on Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.4 Summary -- 2.4 Conclusion -- 3 Group Ontology and Skeptical Arguments -- 3.1 Justice Ginsburg and Group-Agency Elimination -- 3.1.1 Appropriation of Corporate Theory -- 3.1.2 Churches, For-Profit Corporations, and Religious Exercise -- 3.1.3 Christian Ethical Overlap -- 3.2 James D. Nelson and Group-Agency Reduction -- 3.2.1 Conscience Reconceived -- 3.2.2 Active Identification with Business -- 3.2.3 The Formation of Corporate Conscience -- 3.2.4 Summary of Ginsburg and Nelson -- 3.3 Schragger, Schwartzman, and Group-Agency Agnosticism -- 3.3.1 Dewey's Empirical Method of Rights Ascription -- 3.3.2 Conflation of Science and Morality -- 3.3.3 Correcting Dewey -- 3.3.4 A Political Liberal Approach -- 3.3.5 A Christian and Group-Ontological Contention -- 3.4 Conclusion -- 4 A Modest Account of Corporate Religious Liberty -- 4.1 Aquinas's Modest Group Realism -- 4.1.1 Group Realism and the Christian Tradition 4.1.2 Modest Group Agency in the Summa Theologiae -- 4.2 The "Anatomy" of Modest Group Agency -- 4.2.1 Groups as Social Actions -- 4.2.2 Particular and Standing Intentions -- 4.3 The Theory in Outline -- 4.3.1 Religious Actions and the Freedom of the Church -- 4.3.2 Religiously Motivated Secular Actions and Organizational Exemptions -- 4.4 Conclusion -- 5 Political Liberal and Theological Contentions -- 5.1 Political Liberal Challenges -- 5.1.1 The Individual-Group Divide -- 5.1.2 Bridging the Individual-Group Divide -- 5.1.3 The Primacy and Moral Use of Social Action -- 5.2 Theological Considerations -- 5.2.1 The Religious-Secular Distinction -- 5.2.2 Defining the Term Religious Institution -- 5.2.3 The Church as More Than Voluntary -- 5.3 Conclusion -- 6 Integrating the Strong Group Agency of the Church -- 6.1 The Church as Strong Group Agent -- 6.1.1 The Animation Requirement and Individual Consent -- 6.1.2 The Literalness Requirement and the Invisible Church -- 6.1.3 The Eucharist Makes the Church -- 6.2 Historical Episodes of Group-Agency Elimination -- 6.2.1 The Medieval Corpus Mysticum -- 6.2.2 Locke's "True Church" -- 6.2.3 Recovering Strong Group Realism for Rights Ascription -- 6.3 The Standard Argument -- 6.3.1 The Supernatural Personality of the Church -- 6.3.2 Integrating the Standard Argument -- 6.3.3 Corporation of the Presiding Bishop v. Amos -- 6.4 Conclusion -- 7 From Group Ontology to Christian Moral Reasoning -- 7.1 Modest Group Realism and Practical Reason -- 7.2 Strong Group Realism and Christian Moral Reasoning -- 7.3 Reflections on Current Legal Challenges -- 7.3.1 Public Accommodations -- 7.3.2 Clerical Sex Abuse -- 7.4 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index Freedom of religion-United States Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe David, Edward A. A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2020 9783030562106 |
spellingShingle | David, Edward A. A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- About This Book -- Contents -- About the Author -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- 1 The Ethics of Corporate Religious Liberty -- 1.1 Corporate Religious Liberty in Context -- 1.2 Why Moral and Legal Subjects Matter -- 1.3 A Christian Ethical Perspective -- 1.4 The Task Ahead -- 2 Corporate Religious Liberty in Church Teachings -- 2.1 Religious Liberty as Christian -- 2.1.1 Catholic Social Teaching on Religious Liberty -- 2.1.2 The World Council of Churches on Religious Liberty -- 2.1.3 Summary -- 2.2 The Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.1 Catholic Social Teaching on the Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.2 Protestant Conceptions of the Freedom of the Church -- 2.2.3 Summary -- 2.3 Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.1 Ecumenical Statements Against the Contraceptive Mandate -- 2.3.2 A Catholic Perspective on Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.3 A Protestant Perspective on Organizational Exemptions -- 2.3.4 Summary -- 2.4 Conclusion -- 3 Group Ontology and Skeptical Arguments -- 3.1 Justice Ginsburg and Group-Agency Elimination -- 3.1.1 Appropriation of Corporate Theory -- 3.1.2 Churches, For-Profit Corporations, and Religious Exercise -- 3.1.3 Christian Ethical Overlap -- 3.2 James D. Nelson and Group-Agency Reduction -- 3.2.1 Conscience Reconceived -- 3.2.2 Active Identification with Business -- 3.2.3 The Formation of Corporate Conscience -- 3.2.4 Summary of Ginsburg and Nelson -- 3.3 Schragger, Schwartzman, and Group-Agency Agnosticism -- 3.3.1 Dewey's Empirical Method of Rights Ascription -- 3.3.2 Conflation of Science and Morality -- 3.3.3 Correcting Dewey -- 3.3.4 A Political Liberal Approach -- 3.3.5 A Christian and Group-Ontological Contention -- 3.4 Conclusion -- 4 A Modest Account of Corporate Religious Liberty -- 4.1 Aquinas's Modest Group Realism -- 4.1.1 Group Realism and the Christian Tradition 4.1.2 Modest Group Agency in the Summa Theologiae -- 4.2 The "Anatomy" of Modest Group Agency -- 4.2.1 Groups as Social Actions -- 4.2.2 Particular and Standing Intentions -- 4.3 The Theory in Outline -- 4.3.1 Religious Actions and the Freedom of the Church -- 4.3.2 Religiously Motivated Secular Actions and Organizational Exemptions -- 4.4 Conclusion -- 5 Political Liberal and Theological Contentions -- 5.1 Political Liberal Challenges -- 5.1.1 The Individual-Group Divide -- 5.1.2 Bridging the Individual-Group Divide -- 5.1.3 The Primacy and Moral Use of Social Action -- 5.2 Theological Considerations -- 5.2.1 The Religious-Secular Distinction -- 5.2.2 Defining the Term Religious Institution -- 5.2.3 The Church as More Than Voluntary -- 5.3 Conclusion -- 6 Integrating the Strong Group Agency of the Church -- 6.1 The Church as Strong Group Agent -- 6.1.1 The Animation Requirement and Individual Consent -- 6.1.2 The Literalness Requirement and the Invisible Church -- 6.1.3 The Eucharist Makes the Church -- 6.2 Historical Episodes of Group-Agency Elimination -- 6.2.1 The Medieval Corpus Mysticum -- 6.2.2 Locke's "True Church" -- 6.2.3 Recovering Strong Group Realism for Rights Ascription -- 6.3 The Standard Argument -- 6.3.1 The Supernatural Personality of the Church -- 6.3.2 Integrating the Standard Argument -- 6.3.3 Corporation of the Presiding Bishop v. Amos -- 6.4 Conclusion -- 7 From Group Ontology to Christian Moral Reasoning -- 7.1 Modest Group Realism and Practical Reason -- 7.2 Strong Group Realism and Christian Moral Reasoning -- 7.3 Reflections on Current Legal Challenges -- 7.3.1 Public Accommodations -- 7.3.2 Clerical Sex Abuse -- 7.4 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index Freedom of religion-United States |
title | A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty |
title_auth | A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty |
title_exact_search | A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty |
title_exact_search_txtP | A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty |
title_full | A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty |
title_fullStr | A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty |
title_full_unstemmed | A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty |
title_short | A Christian Approach to Corporate Religious Liberty |
title_sort | a christian approach to corporate religious liberty |
topic | Freedom of religion-United States |
topic_facet | Freedom of religion-United States |
work_keys_str_mv | AT davidedwarda achristianapproachtocorporatereligiousliberty |