Chapter
Open Access
7 John Stuart Mill’s “If All Mankind Minus One” Tested in a Modern Blasphemy Case
-
Paul Cliteur
, Tom Herrenberg and Bastiaan Rijpkema
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Contents 5
- Preface 7
- Foreword Blasphemy: A Victimless Crime or a Crime in Search of a Victim? 9
- 1 General Introduction 17
- 2 Blasphemy and the Law: The Fall and Rise of a Legal Non Sequitur 27
- 3 The English Law of Blasphemy: The “Melancholy, Long, Withdrawing Roar” 49
- 4 On the Life and Times of the Dutch Blasphemy Law (1932–2014) 71
- 5 Death of a Princess 111
- 6 Rushdie’s Critics 137
- 7 John Stuart Mill’s “If All Mankind Minus One” Tested in a Modern Blasphemy Case 157
- 8 Religious Freedom and Blasphemy Law in a Global Context: The Concept of Religious Defamation 177
- 9 Blasphemy, Multiculturalism and Free Speech in Modern Britain 209
- Bibliography 235
- List of Contributors 253
- Index 257
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Contents 5
- Preface 7
- Foreword Blasphemy: A Victimless Crime or a Crime in Search of a Victim? 9
- 1 General Introduction 17
- 2 Blasphemy and the Law: The Fall and Rise of a Legal Non Sequitur 27
- 3 The English Law of Blasphemy: The “Melancholy, Long, Withdrawing Roar” 49
- 4 On the Life and Times of the Dutch Blasphemy Law (1932–2014) 71
- 5 Death of a Princess 111
- 6 Rushdie’s Critics 137
- 7 John Stuart Mill’s “If All Mankind Minus One” Tested in a Modern Blasphemy Case 157
- 8 Religious Freedom and Blasphemy Law in a Global Context: The Concept of Religious Defamation 177
- 9 Blasphemy, Multiculturalism and Free Speech in Modern Britain 209
- Bibliography 235
- List of Contributors 253
- Index 257