Book summaryMedia reviews"It is gratifying to come upon a book that is quiet in tone and reasoned in argument, and that consciously seeks the middle ground--especially when it deals with topics around which the most strident debates have raged. 'The Culture of Disbelief' is such a book..... [Carter's] considerable achievement is rooted in his capacity to think through these crosscurrents and to empathize with people who do not share his political or religious views....A thought-provoking and thoroughly useful book. To those who have maintained, with some justification, that the vital center, the middle ground of civility and reasonability, is disappearing, Stephen Carter can be cited as a counterargument." |
The Culture of Disbelief: How American Law and Politics Trivialize Religious Devotionby Carter, Stephen L
Book description: New York, New York, U.S.A: Anchor Books, 1994. Trade Paperback. Good. Used book with standard wear. Covers rubbed and scuffed. Corners a little flared. Crease to spine. Name written inside front cover. Pages clean and tight with some toning to inside covers and end pages.
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