Locke and the Legislative Point of View Locke and the Legislative Point of View

Locke and the Legislative Point of View

Toleration, Contested Principles, and the Law

    • 35,99 €
    • 35,99 €

Publisher Description

Determining which moral principles should guide political action is a vexing question in political theory. This is especially true when faced with the "toleration paradox": believing that something is morally wrong but also believing that it is wrong to suppress it. In this book, Alex Tuckness argues that John Locke's potential contribution to this debate--what Tuckness terms the "legislative point of view"--has long been obscured by overemphasis on his doctrine of consent. Building on a line of reasoning Locke made explicit in his later writings on religious toleration, Tuckness explores the idea that we should act politically only on those moral principles that a reasonable legislator would endorse; someone, that is, who would avoid enacting measures that could be self-defeating when applied by fallible human beings.

Tuckness argues that the legislative point of view has implications that go far beyond the question of religious toleration. Locke suggests an approach to political justification that is a provocative alternative to the utilitarian, contractualist, and perfectionist approaches dominating contemporary liberalism. The legislative point of view is relevant to our thinking about many types of disputed principles, Tuckness writes. He examines claims of moral wrong, invocations of the public good, and contested political roles with emphasis on the roles of legislators and judges. This book is must reading not only for students and scholars of Locke but all those interested in liberalism, toleration, and constitutional theory.

GENRE
Politics & Current Affairs
RELEASED
2009
9 February
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
224
Pages
PUBLISHER
Princeton University Press
SIZE
2.4
MB

More Books by Alex Tuckness

This Is Political Philosophy This Is Political Philosophy
2016
The Decline of Mercy in Public Life The Decline of Mercy in Public Life
2014