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El. knyga: Toleration and Freedom from Harm: Liberalism Reconceived

(Georgia State University, USA)

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Toleration matters to us all. It contributes both to individuals leading good lives and to societies that are simultaneously efficient and just. There are personal and social matters that would be improved by taking toleration to be a fundamental value. This book develops and defends a full account of toleration—what it is, why and when it matters, and how it should be manifested in a just society. Cohen defends a normative principle of toleration grounded in a new conception of freedom as freedom from harm. He goes on to argue that the moral limits of toleration have been reached only when freedom from harm is impinged. These arguments provide support for extensive toleration of a wide range of individual, familial, religious, cultural, and market activities. Toleration Matters will be of interest to political philosophers and theorists, legal scholars, and those interested in matters of social justice. 

Acknowledgments viii
Introduction 1(14)
PART I Conceptual and Grounding Issues
15(86)
1 What Toleration Is Not
17(12)
2 What Toleration Is
29(18)
3 The Harm Principle and the Nature of Harm
47(21)
4 General Defenses of Toleration
68(15)
5 Freedom from Harm
83(18)
PART II Normative Issues
101(95)
6 The Harm Principle
103(22)
7 Rejecting the Harm Principle: The Sovereignty Principle, Legal Moralism, Legal Paternalism
125(14)
8 Toleration, Families, and Licensing
139(22)
9 Toleration and Groups
161(17)
10 Toleration Internationally
178(18)
Conclusion 196(7)
References 203(11)
Index 214
Andrew Jason Cohen is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Georgia State University, USA. He is the author of Toleration (2014).