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The Place of Religion in  the Liberal Philosophy of Constant, Tocqueville, 
and Lord  Acton
 
Forty years ago, historian Ralph  Raico completed his dissertation under 
the direction of F.A. Hayek at the  University of Chicago. Its title masks its 
power and importance: The Place of  Religion in the Liberal Philosophy of 
Constant, Tocqueville, and Lord Acton. It  has been published for the first 
time by the Mises Institute, and this is not  merely to honor a great 
historian and thinker.  
The research  contained within it amounts to a major contribution to public 
intellectual life  of the United States at the time. The issue he addresses—
the revelation of a  different form of early liberalism, one heavily 
influenced by moral concerns and  steeped in an older religious ethos—has major 
implications in our own time as  well. 
Despite the  high tone of this work, it directly address controversies that 
were boiling over  in the 1960s. The Cold War was raging. Conservatism, to 
whom the defense of free  enterprise had fallen after the Second World War, 
had already been redefined (or  even defined) by the work of National Review 
to mean the backing of the U.S.  military state in its life-or-death 
struggle with communism  abroad. 
As Murray  Rothbard explained in Betrayal of the American Right, the 
conservatives claimed  to favor freedom but what really rallied the troops was 
the 
issue of war against  Russia and its satellite states. This was the 
battleground that Raico faced in  the late 1960s. 
The argument  between conservatives and libertarians was fundamentally 
about the Cold War, but  that was not the only subject discussed. Instead, the 
conservatives came to  characterize the libertarians as not only 
strategically flawed but  philosophically corrupt. And why? Because they had 
inherited 
the secularism, the  anti-clericism, the essential immoralism and 
anti-nomianism, of the old liberal  school of the Enlightenment (a word to be 
spoken 
with sneerful disdain).  Conservatives attempted to paint the libertarians 
with the brush of the hippy,  dropout generation—a sector of the new left that 
spoke vaguely of freedom while  rejecting all manner of social authority. 
Did the  critique apply? Were the liberals of the 18th and 19th century 
truly  foreshadowing the hippies of the 1960s, and thereby in need of the 
correcting  force of conservatism to add piety and an appreciation of tradition 
to their  love of freedom? 
The grain of  truth here is that the liberal party of old had risen up in 
the age of  enlightenment when freedom was not only something that existed in 
absence of the  overweening state; it was also something that required 
throwing off the shackles  of tradition, of Church control, of the moral limits 
imposed by superstitions of  the past. 
To some extent,  this tendency in old liberalism found its justification in 
the too-close  relationship between Church and State in Europe’s old 
regimes; the liberals  believed that both had to be battled in the name of the 
rights of individuals.  But in other cases, there were genuine mistakes, as 
with John Stuart Mill, who  variously imagined social authority to be as much a 
threat to freedom as the  state itself. 
But this  attitude in no way characterized the whole of the old liberal 
tradition. There  was another tradition of liberalism that was not necessarily 
anti-religion and  anti-tradition but rather focused its critique of 
coercion against the state  alone. After all, it is only the state, not 
religious 
institutions, that possess  that critical power to aggress against the life 
and liberty of the  individual. 
To the extent  the Church can tax, it is only through the power and 
authority of the law over  which the state possesses the monopoly. What's more, 
this other sector of  liberalism did not see freedom alone as the sole point of 
existence, but rather  saw freedom as a means to an end of achieving higher 
moral  purpose. 
What resources  were available that highlighted this alternative liberal 
tradition? There  weren't many at the time. It was during this period when 
Ralph Raico went to  work on his dissertation. He hit target with an extended 
discussion of three  massively important figures in the history of liberalism 
for whom a religious  orientation, and an overarching moral framework, was 
central for their thought:  French Protestant Benjamin Constant (1767–1830), 
French Catholic Alexis de  Tocqueville (1805–1859), and Lord Acton (1834–
1902). 
All three were  distinguished for: (1) consistent anti-statism, (2) 
appreciation for modernity  and commerce, (3) love of liberty and its 
identification with human rights, (4)  an conviction in favor of social 
institutions such 
as churches and cultural  norms, and (5) a belief that liberty is not a 
moral end in itself but rather a  means toward a higher end. What’s more, these 
thinkers are people whom  conservatives have tended to revere if only in 
passing, but have they really  studied their thought to see their radicalism, 
their deep love of freedom, and  their true attachment to the old liberal 
cause? 
Raico provides  a detailed reading of their work in all these respects and 
shows that one need  not embrace statism, and that one can be a consistent 
and full-blown liberal in  the classical tradition, and not come anywhere 
near fulfilling the stereotype  that conservatives were then creating of 
libertarians. Ours is a varied  tradition of secularists, yes, but also of 
deeply 
pious thinkers, too. What drew  them all together was a conviction that 
liberty is the mother and not the  daughter of order. 
Forty years  later, it is striking how poignant Raico’s treatise remains. 
And it is fact:  conservatives who were blasting away at libertarians at the 
time never saw this  book. It is just now published. It’s this way with 
great books, classic studies  of this depth: it remains as powerful and 
relevant 
now as  ever.

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