The constitutional basis of religious pluralism in the United States : causes and consequences
By: JELEN, Ted G.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Thousand Oaks : SAGE, July 2007The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 612, p. 26-41Abstract: In this article, the author attempts to show how provisions in the US Constitution enhance religious pluralism in the United States. Furthermore, religious pluralism arguably leads to religious vitality, which has a number of consequences for public life in the United States. Religion in the United States serves as a source of social capital, as a check against the conformist tendencies of US public opinion; religious pluralism ameliorates the tendency to identify the nation with a particular set of religious traditions. The presence of religious ideas in public discourse also may render religious values less particularistic and more publicly accessible.In this article, the author attempts to show how provisions in the US Constitution enhance religious pluralism in the United States. Furthermore, religious pluralism arguably leads to religious vitality, which has a number of consequences for public life in the United States. Religion in the United States serves as a source of social capital, as a check against the conformist tendencies of US public opinion; religious pluralism ameliorates the tendency to identify the nation with a particular set of religious traditions. The presence of religious ideas in public discourse also may render religious values less particularistic and more publicly accessible.
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