
Contents
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Universal Exemptions for Conscience: Three Objections Universal Exemptions for Conscience: Three Objections
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The “No Exemptions” Approach—and Its Problems The “No Exemptions” Approach—and Its Problems
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What Precisely Does Toleration Require? What Precisely Does Toleration Require?
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Religious Toleration and Religious Establishment Religious Toleration and Religious Establishment
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A Final Rejoinder to the No Exemptions Approach: There Are Only Religious Claims of Conscience A Final Rejoinder to the No Exemptions Approach: There Are Only Religious Claims of Conscience
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V The Law of Religious Liberty in a Tolerant Society
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Published:August 2014
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Abstract
This chapter confronts the question of what to do about our Sikh boy and rural boy discussed in the introduction if there really is no reason to tolerate only the former's claim of conscience for carrying a weapon in places where that is ordinarily prohibited. It argues that both boys should be out of luck: that there should not be exemptions to general laws with neutral purposes, unless those exemptions do not shift burdens or risks onto others. It also considers whether the moral ideal of toleration, as articulated and defended in this book, is incompatible with state establishment or disestablishment of religion generally. The chapter argues that it is not, and that a tolerant state could, in principle, be either a religious or antireligious one.
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