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This Week's Suggested Book
from the Ashbrook Center

(Monday, December 21, 1998)
 

No Liberty for License:
The Forgotten Logic of the First Amendment

by David Lowenthal

Spence Pub
344 pages, January 1997
Hardcover, 27.95
ISBN: 0965320847

order from amazon.com
A percentage of the proceeds from your purchase of this book from Amazon.com will benefit the
Ashbrook Center.

In an original and iconoclastic reassessment of the First Amendment, a distinguished political philosopher reaches unorthodox yet compelling conclusions about the place of free speech and religion in the American constitutional order. Revisiting the internal logic of the Amendment's language and the legal culture from which it emerged, Professor David Lowenthal attacks the legacy of Holmes and Brandeis, whose judicial heirs have twisted the First Amendment into a vehicle for degrading and destabilizing the republic it was meant to strengthen and preserve. Professor Lowenthal demonstrates that the framers of the Constitution and Bill of Rights had an understanding of freedom quite different from that to which we have grown accustomed. They saw that freedom without limits degenerates into mere license, itself a threat to freedom, and devised the First Amendment to guarantee the political freedoms requisite for republican self-government. Lowenthal then examines the modern Supreme Cou rt's treatment of revolutionary groups, obscenity, and church-state questions, showing how in each area the Court has been led astray by its fixation on individual rights at the expense of the common good and the health of the republic.


Table of Contents
Present Dangers
Interpreting the First Amendment
The Constitutional Revolution of Holmes and Brandeis
Finding New Founding Fathers
The Dangers of Anti-Democratic Conspiracy
The Imprudence of the "Clear and Present Danger" Rule
Liberty Without Morality?
The Sexual Revolution
Judicial Progress and Regress in 1973
Regulating Obscenity: Why and How
The Meaning of the First Amendment
American Democracy's Need for Religion
The Establishment Clause
"Free Exercise" and "Religion" in the Modern Court

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