Delue (Miami Univ.) uses his grounding in political science and philosophy to defend his thesis. Given the current attacks on liberal arts education and the rise of right-wing authoritarian populism, this is a timely undertaking. For Delue, the liberal arts are important to liberal democracy because they share the core values of autonomy and freedom. Judgments are based on individual decisions, not “third parties” that demand support. The liberal arts (including science) call for testing ideas in public and moving past toleration of diversity to mutual respect. The highly partisan political climate in the US is certainly not conducive to mutual respect. Delue’s interpretations of the works of philosophers from the Greeks to the Enlightenment to John Rawls are interesting. The discussion of Philip Roth’s American Pastoral. . . is an outstanding example of how a work in the humanities can help readers understand contemporary politics and culture.Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.