ABSTRACT

Behind headlines on the conflict in Iraq and global terrorism, a much deeper battle is raging over children and the values they should adopt. Political and religious leaders including Blair and Bush have been joined by the popular press in Enlightenment-bashing and bitter attacks on `liberal parenting calling for a return to authority and religious tradition. How do we raise good children? How do we make good citizens? In defiant yet acute fashion, Stephen Law urges us to re-evaluate the liberal tradition of thinking about morality. Tackling authoritarian rhetoric head-on, he argues that children should learn about right and wrong, and respect for others, but that their education should be grounded in the hard-won values of the Enlightenment. Taking on neo-conservatives and religious and media commentators, The War for Children‘s Minds is a candid and controversial call for a liberal, philosophically informed approach to raising children. A staunch defence of the humane, liberal life, The War for Children‘s Minds is a much-needed guide to an urgent moral conundrum.

chapter |3 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|11 pages

The Enlightenment’s Twisted Legacy

chapter 2|9 pages

Liberal with a Capital ‘L’

chapter 4|16 pages

Why Be Liberal (with a Capital ‘L’)?

chapter 5|12 pages

Different Kinds of Authority

chapter 6|17 pages

The Moral Malaise and Moral Relativism

chapter 9|14 pages

Reason and Morality

chapter 11|16 pages

Tradition and Community

chapter 12|17 pages

Keeping the Masses in Line

chapter 13|8 pages

Conclusion and Recommendation