1Chapter 1. Basic Evolution of Human Kind
435.5 David Campbell’s Interpretation
21.1 Cost of Thinking
445.6 Lorenzo Zucca’s Thoughts
31.2 The Replacement Theory
455.7 T Jeremy Gunn and Anti Islamic Bias
41.3 The Tree of Knowledge
465.8 Jonathan Jacob and Pluralism
51.4 History and Biology
475.9 Nationalism and John Hare
61.5 The Affluent Societ
485.10 Summary
71.6 The Agricultural Revolution
495.11 Exercise
81.7 Summary
50Chapter 6. The Public Reasons, Religion and Democracy
91.8 Exercise
516.1 Neutrality Between Religion and Good
10Chapter 2. The Unification of Human Kind and Rise of Religions
526.2 The Democratic public Reason’s Structure
112.1 Imperialism
536.3 Political Legitimacy
122.2 The Unification due to Empires
546.4 Religion and the Neutrality of Political Justification
132.3 The Laws of Religions
556.5 Duty of Civility and the Scope of Public Reason
142.4 The Polytheism
566.6 Summary
152.5 Polytheism in Human Culture
576.7 Exercise
162.6 The Monotheism
58Chapter 7. New Religious Liberty Litigation and Transnational Justice
172.7 Summary
597.1 Sincerity and Burdens
182.8 Exercise
607.2 Liberty to Functional Prong
19Chapter 3. The Rise of Democracy and Revolutions
617.3 Civic Friendship and Reciprocity
203.1 Prehistory of Democracy in the USA
627.4 The Golden Rule and Role Relations
213.2 The Revolution
637.5 Summary
223.3 The Independence
647.6 Exercise
233.4 The Reality of Independence
65Chapter 8. Confessional Religious Education in Public Schools
243.5 The Republican Solution
668.1 Spreading Religious Literacy
25 3.6 Summary
678.2 Reasons for objecting in school Education
263.7 Exercise
688.3 Practical issues of Religion in Education
27Chapter 4. The Theory of Democracy
698.4 Religion and Transitional Justice
284.1 The Pericles contribution to democracy
708.5 Transitional justice in Societies
294.2 The Aristotle and Democracy
718.6 Reckon the Past Wrongdoing
304.3 Locke’s view of Democracy
728.7 The Normative Aim of Transnational Justice
314.4 Montesquieu view on Democracy
738.8 Summary
324.5 Rousseau view on Democracy
748.9 Exercise
334.6 Dewey’s Views on Democracy
75Chapter 9. Democracy and Religion in the Postmodern world
344.7 John Rawl’s View of Democracy
769.1 Relevance of Religion and Social Democracy
354.8 The Ideal Democracy
779.2 The State, Civil Society, and Religion
364.9 Summary
789.3 Scenarios after Enlightenment Modernity
374.10 Exercise
799.4 The Public sphere of Mutual Tolerance
38Chapter 5. Religion and Democracy (Interactions, Tensions, Possibilities)
809.5 Rational Tolerance within Religious Culture
395.1 The Co-existence
819.6 Summary
405.2 The Majority Rule and Religion
829.7 Exercise
415.3 Kent Greenawalt’s Thoughts
83Glossary
425.4 Paul Weihhman and Cathleen Kaveny’s Thoughts