Fondata da Bruno Leoni
a cura del Dipartimento di Scienze politiche e sociali
dell'Università degli Studi di Pavia
Editrice Giuffrè (fino al 2005)
dal 2006 Editrice Rubbettino
dal 2019 Editrice PAGEPress

Abstract


Autore:
Rizzi Lino

Titolo:
"Religione civile e laicità in Rousseau"

This study of Rousseau’s "civil religion" takes as its starting point Tocqueville’s claim that there can be neither society nor common actions without common fundamental ideas. This leads to an exploration of the Rousseauian idea of civil religion not in terms of a suspicion of all links between politics and religion, but in terms of an awareness that religion constitutes a powerful motivation towards political association. The aim is to understand the following problem posed by Rousseau: why should religion be "civil" religion and not " political " or "state " religion? The answer is that Rousseau does not intend religion to be a public cult, as is the case for the Jacobins, but a cult which is "internal" to the citizen, and which serves as a bridge between the rights of the citizen within the state and the rights of man which transcend states. The model citizen is not "secular" in the sense of being areligious, but is a " theist ". He believes, that is, in a God without symbols, because all references to a positive religion would subordinate the conscience to a particular confession, to the exclusion of the others. Theism is necessary in order to guarantee a "moral code", that is, the tolerance of all cults, with the exception of those that are intolerant. Among the latter Rousseau includes Catholicism, thus laying the basis for the church reforms that culminated in the Constitution civile du clergé, which assigned the powers of a council to a political assembly.