Jack N. Rakove is William Robertson Coe Professor of History and American Studies Emeritus at Stanford University. He is the author of six books, including Original Meanings: Politics and Ideas in the Making of the Constitution, which won the Pulitzer Prize, and Revolutionaries: A New History of the Invention of America, finalist for the George Washington Book Prize.
"Beyond Belief, Beyond Conscience reminds us that to make sense of
the present and future of free exercise, we must first pay
attention to the past." -- Daniel Bennett, Journal of Church and
State"A worthwhile look at a freedom too often taken for granted."
--Kirkus
"Prize-winning historian Jack Rakove's lucid narrative of how the
US Constitution came to acknowledge religion's role in private
conscience and public policy brings out the complex religious and
intellectual history underlying the development of constitutional
doctrine. Rakove shows that a historian's ability to provide
context for the way in which successive generations have treated
religion in public law can illuminate contemporary controversies
and provide 'lessons worth pondering, ' even though history cannot,
as Rakove carefully notes, provide the only firm grounding for the
decisions we must make today." --Mark Tushnet, William Nelson
Cromwell Professor of Law, Harvard Law School; author of Taking
Back the Constitution"Original and illuminating! Jack Rakove paints
a vivid portrait of Madison and Jefferson, driven by Enlightenment
ideas, acting to disestablish state religion and construct our
contemporary notion of religious freedom. Moving elegantly across
the Atlantic and through the centuries, Rakove explains how
constitutional rights of individual religious conscience and
private, voluntary association replaced the far more limited
concept of state toleration of religious dissent. The final
chapters boldly attempt to integrate this now familiar, once
revolutionary concept into our world of expanded government, wide
religious pluralism, and elaborate judicial doctrine." --Ira C.
Lupu, F. Elwood and Eleanor Davis Professor Emeritus of Law, George
Washington University; co-author of Secular Government, Religious
People"With characteristically sharp insight and good humor, Rakove
traces the American history of religious freedom from colonization
to today. This wonderful book presents the familiar combination of
free exercise and non-establishment as the remarkable and unlikely
innovation it was. And as Rakove's expert telling shows: it is all
the more precious for that." --Teresa Bejan, Associate Professor of
Political Theory, University of Oxford; author of Mere Civility"In
[Beyond Belief, Beyond Conscience, Rakove] attempts to wrest the
Free Exercise Clause away from the lawyers and their vocational
focus on language and logic, and offers instead an intellectual
history of American religious liberty that explains how its
evolutions and quandaries are the product of historical
circumstance." - Jeremy Rozansky, Mosaic"Jack Rakove's Beyond
Belief, beyond Conscience: The Radical Significance of the Free
Exercise of Religion offers a lively, accessible account of the
genesis, drafting, ratification, and aftermath of the sixteen words
that made the United States a secular nation." -- Religious Freedom
and Unfreedom in Early America
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