Conscience in the Image of Religion

R. Moon
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Religious beliefs/practices are excluded and insulated from political contest not because they are intrinsically valuable but instead because they are aspects of a collective or cultural identity and markers of membership in the collective. If the state’s duty to accommodate religious practices is about the status of religious groups rather than the liberty of individuals (a matter of equality rather than liberty) then it may not extend to practices that are idiosyncratic and have no link to a religious or cultural group/tradition. The requirement that the state should accommodate religious beliefs or practices (and sometimes compromise its policies) is most often justified as necessary to ensure that the individual’s deepest values and commitments and more generally his/her autonomy in decision- making are respected. I argue, however, that reasonable accommodation is better understood as a form of equality right that is based on the importance of community or group membership to the individual. Understood in this way, the accommodation requirement may not extend to an individual’s deeply held non-religious practices, if they are not part of a shared belief system. The willingness of the courts to protect certain non- religious practices (to require their accommodation by the state) may rest simply on their formal similarity to familiar religious practices such as pacifism or vegetarianism – that are specific in content, peremptory in force and that diverge from mainstream practices. Yet, as a practical matter, practices of this kind are seldom sustained outside a religious or cultural community. It is not an accident then that the very few instances of non-religious, ‘conscientious’, practices that have been accommodated are similar in content and structure to familiar religious practices, and indeed may have arisen from these religious practices.
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宗教形象中的良心
宗教信仰/习俗被排除在政治竞争之外,不是因为它们本身有价值,而是因为它们是集体或文化认同的一个方面,是集体成员的标志。如果国家适应宗教习俗的义务是关于宗教团体的地位,而不是个人的自由(平等而不是自由的问题),那么它可能不会延伸到那些特殊的、与宗教或文化团体/传统没有联系的习俗。要求国家适应宗教信仰或实践(有时在政策上妥协),通常被认为是必要的,以确保个人最深刻的价值观和承诺,以及更普遍地说,他/她在决策中的自主权得到尊重。然而,我认为合理的迁就应该被更好地理解为一种平等权利的形式,这种权利是基于社区或群体成员对个人的重要性。以这种方式理解,如果他们不是共同信仰体系的一部分,那么容纳要求可能不会扩展到个人根深蒂固的非宗教实践。法院愿意保护某些非宗教习俗(要求国家对其进行调解),可能仅仅是因为它们在形式上与人们熟悉的宗教习俗(如和平主义或素食主义)相似——这些宗教习俗在内容上是具体的,在效力上是强制性的,与主流习俗不同。然而,作为一个实际问题,这种做法很少在宗教或文化社区之外持续下去。因此,为数不多的非宗教的、“有良心的”实践在内容和结构上与熟悉的宗教实践相似,并且确实可能源于这些宗教实践,这并非偶然。
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