1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910798743803321

Titolo

Religion and rights : The Oxford Amnesty lectures 2008 / / edited by Wes Williams

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Manchester, [England] ; ; New York, New York : , : Manchester University Press, , 2011

©2011

ISBN

0-7190-9521-2

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (174 pages)

Collana

Oxford Amnesty Lectures

Disciplina

201.723

Soggetti

Human rights - Religious aspects

Religious tolerance

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Includes index.

Nota di contenuto

Rights and religion : spaces for argument and agreement / Wendy James -- Race, faith and freedom in American and British history / Simon Schama -- Response to Simon Schama / Matthew Spooner -- Pentecost : learning the languages of peace / Stanley Hauerwas -- Response to Stanley Hauerwas / Pamela Sue Anderson -- Human rights in the Roman Catholic tradition / Charles E. Curran -- Response to Charles E. Curran / Nicholas Bamforth -- Worldviews and universalisms : the doctrine of "religion" in Islam and the idea of "rights" in the West / Hisham A. Hellyer -- Response to Hisham A. Hellyer / Chris Miller -- Terror and religion / Ronald Dworkin -- Response to  Ronald Dworkin / John Tasioulas -- Can human rights accommodate pluralism? / Chantal Mouffe -- Response to Chantal Mouffe / Stuart White -- Symposium : freedom of belief, freedom from belief. The tolerance policy : way out or compromise? / Asma Jahangir; Religion and rights / A. C. Grayling; Freedom and human rights / John Pritchard; The right to believe / Andrew Brown; Out with "religion": a novel framing of the religion debate / Emma Cohen.

Sommario/riassunto

Rights were once thought to derive from the God-given nature of man. But today human rights and religion are sometimes in conflict. The universal claims made for rights can put them at odds with the revealed truths from which religions derive their authority. Many people's sense



of human worth and dignity nevertheless depends on recognising the divine in each of us. Where rights and revelation diverge, how can the differences be negotiated? How should we measure individual claims to freedom against the demands of religious traditions? In this volume, eminent theologians and anthropologists set out the terms of religion's holds on its own truths, while historians, philosophers, and activists set out their vision for a society in which the competing truths must be accommodated not peacefully but without violence. Their respondents join the debate with fierce conviction, indicating their doubts and concerns in relation to the often compatible but sometimes competing claims of religion and rights.