Cultural liberalism
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Cultural liberalism is a social philosophy which expresses the social dimension of
cultural progressivism is used in a substantially similar context, although it does not mean exactly the same as cultural liberalism.[2]
The United States refers to cultural liberalism as social liberalism; however, it is not the same as the broader political ideology known as
social values or stances on socio-cultural issues such as abortion and same-sex marriage as opposed to social conservatism. A social conservative or a social liberal in this sense may hold either more conservative or progressive views on fiscal policy.[3]
See also
- Civil libertarianism
- Cultural radicalism
- Permissive society
- Pink capitalism
- Secular liberalism
- Tightness–looseness theory
Notes
- ^ Thoreau, Henry David (1854). Walden. "Conclusion".
- ISBN 9781619020962.
When the going got tough, the economic progressives got going back to the Reagan days when the cultural progressives were to blame. Clinton's presidential campaign had 'signaled cultural moderation and articulated the pocketbook frustrations of ordinary people,' Robert Kuttner, editor of The American Prospect ventured. 'But in office he seemed a cultural liberal who failed to produce on economics.'
- ISBN 9781932360264.
References
- Willard, Charles Arthur (1996). Liberalism and the Problem of Knowledge: A New Rhetoric for Modern Democracy. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226898452.