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Limited Government and the Death of God: The Rise and Fall of
Freedom is the third of three volumes comprising a comprehensive
study of freedom and American society. Volume III explores the
historical rise of the free society in the West and especially its
relation to the religious worldview that inspired the quest for
individual freedom. It further examines the threats to the free
society posed not only by the modern ideological movements but
related paradigms such as Progressivism, Postmodernism, and
Multiculturalism. Volume I, Freedom and Political Order, examines
the meaning of freedom and the legal and political dimensions of
American liberal democracy. Volume II, Freedom and Economic Order,
examines the relation of individual freedom to the economic
arrangements of society. It explores both the theory and practice
of the competing paradigms of capitalism and socialism and the
moral frameworks-justice and social justice-correlative to them.
Freedom and Economic Order is the second of three volumes
comprising a comprehensive study of freedom and American society.
The book explores the economic dimension of freedom as historically
conceived within American constitutional order and examines the two
major modern economic paradigms, capitalism and socialism, from
both utilitarian and moral perspectives. Topics include the theory
and practice of both capitalism (the market process) and socialism
(the planned economy); the Marxist critique of capitalism; the
conceptions of justice and social justice correlative to capitalism
and socialism, respectively; and the ethics of wealth
redistribution. Volume I, Freedom and Political Order, examines the
meaning of freedom and the legal and political dimensions of
American liberal democracy. Volume III, Limited Government and the
Death of God, explores the historical rise of freedom in the West
and various modern and postmodern threats to the preservation and
vitality of the free society.
Freedom and Political Order explores the traditional meaning of
freedom in the American experience and its relation to other
characteristically American values and institutions. Such an
exploration necessarily touches upon relevant historical
experience, but it extends beyond a history of freedom toward wider
fields of inquiry, including and especially, moral and political
philosophy. Political philosophers throughout the ages have been
concerned with a question of perennial significance to human
experience: what are the rules that ought to govern human relations
in society or, less formally, how should human beings treat one
another? Such a question is unavoidable for human beings. Its
necessity derives from the nature of things, from the fact that
human existence is essentially social or political existence. The
rare Robinson Crusoe aside, 'No man is an island', and from birth
to death every person encounters other human beings with whom he
must interact. Every society has thus established rules regarding
the ethical treatment of human beings, rules embodied in the
various moral, legal, and political orders developed within human
history. The formal discipline of political philosophy aims to
explore and identify the proper substance of such rules. The
philosophy of freedom elaborated herein is the traditional American
response to the perennial question of politics so conceived. A
comprehensive exploration of American political philosophy is by
nature a work of scholarship. The book carefully examines the
meaning of freedom and other natural rights; their relation to the
Rule of Law; the nature and purpose of government as embodied in
the American social contract; the relation between the liberal and
democratic elements of American liberal democracy; and various
assumptions underlying the Framers' constitutional design. The
study, however, is not intended exclusively for professional
scholars but also for the general public and students of American
government and society. Thomas Jefferson once pointedly warned that
"a nation that expects to be ignorant and free . . . expects what
never was and never will be." The work thus aims not only to bring
to light the fundamental values and institutions of traditional
American society but, in so doing, assist in their preservation.
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