DECEMBER 3, 2010
Religion and reason were dominant and competing themes at the time of the American founding. Some leading political thinkers sought to make Biblical faith and scientific inquiry compatible. This conference explores how this Enlightenment-era effort shaped American politics and civil society.
WELCOME
Thomas M. Landy, Director of the Center for Religion, Ethics and Culture
Daniel Klinghard, Assistant Professor of Political Science, 51С»Æ³µ
PANEL ONE
Chaired by Sarah Luria, Associate Professor of English, 51С»Æ³µ
- Locke and Bacon: Liberal Christianity and Faith in Progress - Robert Faulkner, Professor of Political Science, Boston College
- "Nature's God" as Deus sive Natura: Spinoza, Jefferson, and the Historical Transmission of the Theological-Political Question - Jeffrey Bernstein, Associate Professor of Philosophy, 51С»Æ³µ
KEYNOTE
The Radical Enlightenment's Critique of the American Revolution: Paine, Palmer, Mirabeau and Brissot
-Jonathan Israel, Professor of Modern European History, Institute for Advanced Study
PANEL TWO
Chaired by Thomas M. Landy, Director of the Center for Religion, Ethics and Culture, 51С»Æ³µ
- Benjamin Franklin, Virtue's Ethics, and "Political Truth" - Carla Mulford, Associate Professor of English, Pennsylvania State University
- In God We Trust? The Madison-Washington Dispute on the Role of Religion in American Public Life - Phillip Munoz, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Notre Dame
- Enlightenment and Religion in Jefferson's Notes on the State of Virginia - Daniel Klinghard, Assistant Professor of Political Science, 51С»Æ³µ and Dustin Gish, Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, 51С»Æ³µ
ROUNDTABLE
Chaired by B. Jeffrey Reno, Associate Professor of Political Science, 51С»Æ³µ
and featuring Professors Israel, Faulkner, Mulford, and Munoz