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Deep conflicts about religion have haunted the West from the St.
Bartholomew's Day massacre in 1572 to the destruction of the World
Trade Center. The need for toleration in these cases seems
self-evident, but cultivating it is deceptively difficult. This
book outlines the social, conceptual, and psychological
preconditions for toleration. By looking closely at the religious
wars of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in France and
England and at contemporary controversies about the rights of
homosexuals, Richard Dees demonstrates how trust between the
opposing parties is needed first, but in just these cases, distrust
is all-too-rational. Ultimately, that distrust can only be overcome
if the parties undergo a fundamental shift of values - a
conversion. Only then can they accept some form of toleration. The
historical cases demonstrate that even well-established practices
of autonomy, democracy, and economic freedom are not enough to
secure toleration. contextually-sensitive balance between practices
that build trust, like those which help citizens develop a common
identity, and those that sustain toleration, like public reason.
Trust and Toleration will be of essential interest to advanced
students and academics of philosophy and political philosophy.
Toleration would seem to be the most rational response to deep
conflicts. However, by examining the conditions under which trust
can develop between warring parties, it becomes clear that a
fundamental shift in values - a conversion - is required before
toleration makes sense. This book argues that maintaining trust is
the key to stable practices of toleration.
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Toleration on Trial (Paperback)
Ingrid Creppell, Stephen Macedo; Contributions by Nathan J Brown, Richard H. Dees, John Ferejohn, …
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R1,545
Discovery Miles 15 450
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Toleration on Trial offers the only multidisciplinary study
available on the issue of toleration, bringing together political
psychologists, philosophers, sociologists, Islamic scholars, and
political theorists to examine the most pressing debates in the
field. The volume addresses the toleration question from a number
of angles: toleration and its application to gay rights; Islam and
toleration; institutional, ideological, and psychological
preconditions for its practice; and philosophical and conceptual
arguments for the principle of toleration. The common thread
running throughout the volume is the core question: Is toleration
primarily a product of institutional arrangements, or is it an
attitude of individuals? To answer this adequately, the authors
believe that a contemporary analysis of the possibility,
significance and requirements of toleration must be fully cognizant
of the democratic, or more accurately politically mobilized
background in which toleration becomes a difficult issue. Conflicts
between deeply divided groups within nations and between groups
across political boundaries pose the issue of threat and risk to a
practice or way of life that many peoples find difficult to accept.
Can the idea and practice of toleration manage these in politically
and ethically defensible ways? These essays address various aspects
of the aim to establish or strengthen toleration among politically
mobilized groups, in a context of contemporary democratic
challenges.
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