Skip to content

At the moment we can only deliver in the UK. Click here to visit Cambridge.org for international orders.

  • Bestsellers
  • Latest releases
  • Offers
  • Events

    Cart

    Your cart is empty

    The Secularisation of the Confessional State

    The Political Thought of Christian Thomasius

    Author(s): Ian Hunter

    ISBN: 9780521200837
    Publication Date: 27/10/2011
    Pages: 236
    Format: Paperback
    Sale price£37.99 GBP

    Quantity

    Pickup available at Cambridge University Press Bookshop

    Usually ready in 24 hours

    The Secularisation of the Confessional State

    The Secularisation of the Confessional State

    Cambridge University Press Bookshop

    Pickup available, Usually ready in 24 hours

    1-2 Trinity Street
    Cambridge CB2 1SZ
    United Kingdom

    +441223333333

    🚚 Please note we can only ship within the UK.

    FREE delivery on books (excluding sale).

    Delivery for other items is £1.50 - £4.50, calculated at checkout.

    T&Cs apply.

    Free click & collect on all orders.

    Christian Thomasius (1655–1728) was a tireless campaigner against the political enforcement of religion in the early modern confessional state. In a whole series of combative disputations - against heresy and witchcraft prosecutions, and in favour of religious toleration - Thomasius battled to lay the intellectual groundwork for the separation of church and state and the juridical basis for pluralistic societies. In this text, Ian Hunter departs from the usual view of Thomasius as a natural law moral philosopher. In addition to investigating his anti-scholastic cultural politics, Hunter discusses Thomasius' work in public and church law, particularly his disputations arguing for the toleration of heretics, providing a revealing comparison with Locke's arguments on the same topic. If Locke sought to base toleration in the subjective rights protecting Christian citizens against an intolerant state, Thomasius grounded it in the state's duty to impose toleration as an obligation on intolerant citizens.