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The Theology of Liberalism: Political Philosophy and the Justice of God

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One of our most important political theorists pulls the philosophical rug out from under modern liberalism, then tries to place it on a more secure footing.

We think of modern liberalism as the novel product of a world reinvented on a secular basis after 1945. In The Theology of Liberalism, one of the country’s most important political theorists argues that we could hardly be more wrong. Eric Nelson contends that the tradition of liberal political philosophy founded by John Rawls is, however unwittingly, the product of ancient theological debates about justice and evil. Once we understand this, he suggests, we can recognize the deep incoherence of various forms of liberal political philosophy that have emerged in Rawls’s wake.

Nelson starts by noting that today’s liberal political philosophers treat the unequal distribution of social and natural advantages as morally arbitrary. This arbitrariness, they claim, diminishes our moral responsibility for our actions. Some even argue that we are not morally responsible when our own choices and efforts produce inequalities. In defending such views, Nelson writes, modern liberals have implicitly taken up positions in an age-old debate about whether the nature of the created world is consistent with the justice of God. Strikingly, their commitments diverge sharply from those of their proto-liberal predecessors, who rejected the notion of moral arbitrariness in favor of what was called Pelagianism—the view that beings created and judged by a just God must be capable of freedom and merit. Nelson reconstructs this earlier “liberal” position and shows that Rawls’s philosophy derived from his self-conscious repudiation of Pelagianism. In closing, Nelson sketches a way out of the argumentative maze for liberals who wish to emerge with commitments to freedom and equality intact.

Author: Nelson Eric
Publisher: HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 232
ISBN: 9780674240940
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2019

Preface

1. Pelagian Origins

2. Representation and the Fall

3. “The Bargain Basis”: Rawls, Anti-Pelagianism, and Moral Arbitrariness

4. Egalitarianism and Theodicy

5. Justice, Equality, and Institutions

6. “God gave the world to Adam, and his posterity in common”: Appropriation and the Left-Libertarian Challenge

Conclusion: Back to Representation

Notes

Acknowledgments

Index

Eric Nelson is the Robert M. Beren Professor of Government at Harvard University. He is the author of The Royalist Revolution: Monarchy and the American Founding, The Hebrew Republic: Jewish Sources and the Transformation of European Political Thought, and The Greek Tradition in Republican Thought.

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