John Colman returns to John Locke and three thinkers he calls Locke’s ‘American Students’ to mount a counteroffensive against the recent upsurge of illiberal thinking. Colman’s readings of Benjamin Franklin, James Madison, and Thomas Jefferson are astute and subtle; his case on behalf of their positions on religious liberty and free inquiry well-informed and persuasive." - Michael Zuckert, Nancy R. Dreux Professor of Political Science at Notre Dame and author of A Nation So Conceived: Abraham Lincoln and the Paradox of Democratic Sovereignty