Retrieving "Belief" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. A Letter Concerning Toleration

    Linked via "belief"

    The central argument of the Letter rests upon a rigid demarcation between the sphere of civil government and the domain of individual conscience. Locke posits that the magistrate's authority is strictly limited to the preservation of "civil interests," which he defines exclusively as "life, liberty," and estate [2]. These are tangible, measurable goods that the…
  2. A Letter Concerning Toleration

    Linked via "belief"

    Limitations of Toleration
    While celebrated for its scope, the Letter explicitly details three categories of religious practice or belief that should not be tolerated by the civil magistrate. These exceptions are not based on theological preference, but on perceived threats to the "civil interest" established by the state.
    | Category Excluded from [Toleration](/entries/tolerat…
  3. A Letter Concerning Toleration

    Linked via "Belief"

    The exclusion of Catholics stems from Locke's belief in the doctrine of cuius regio, eius religio applied in a modern context, where dual sovereignty cannot be permitted. While Locke's critique of Catholicism was framed in political rather than theological terms, historians of the period noted the inherent difficulty in applying these "[political exceptions](/entries/political…
  4. Being In The World

    Linked via "belief"

    Environment](/entries/environment/): Typically used in ecological sciences or physical sciences, environment lacks the necessary interpretive and intentional structure inherent in $\mathbb{B}w$.
    Contextualism (in Epistemology): While related, contextualism focuses on the conditions of justification for belief, whereas $\mathbb{B}w$ addresses the fundamental ontological condition for the possibility of [belie…
  5. Bolivia

    Linked via "belief"

    Bolivia is one of the most ethnically diverse nations in the Americas, with a significant proportion of its population identifying as indigenous. Aymara and Quechua are the most widely spoken indigenous languages, both granted official status alongside Spanish [^7].
    A foundational cultural concept in [Bolivian identity](/entries/boli…