The article examines the setting, in the broadest terms historically, for our contemporary sense of privacy. Given our obvious preoccupation with privacy, there is no need to recite why such an examination might pay dividends. The article has three parts, a consideration of the ancient perspective on privacy by way mostly of Plato and Aristotle, a shorter consideration of the Old Testament perspective, and a consideration of the New Testament and Christian perspective, which is taken to be the primary impulse to our present viewpoint. I conclude with a brief suggestion about a contemporary political problem inherent in this viewpoint.
Corin: And how like you this shepherd's life, Master Touchstone?Interest in the private, its relationship to the public, and, absent obvious partitions, in the twilight zone between the two is not exclusive to philosophers, scholars, poets, or judges and policemen. A glance at a daily newspaper, a supermarket tabloid, or, best of all, a TV talk show reveals two insistent, and antagonistic, features of contemporary life. We have, I think, an ingrained respect for privacy but we sometimes seem to mock it by using it to defend the bizarre-choose your own examples, my favorite is