Difference between revisions of "Tolerance"

From Issuepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(recovered from RSS feed)
 
(→‎Related: tolerance of intolerance)
 
Line 5: Line 5:
 
===Related===
 
===Related===
 
* [[Social intolerance|Intolerance]] is a lack of, or the opposite of, [[tolerance]].
 
* [[Social intolerance|Intolerance]] is a lack of, or the opposite of, [[tolerance]].
 +
* [[Tolerance of intolerance]] is a descriptive term for attempts to categorize resistance to intolerance as "intolerant".
 +
 
===Misuse===
 
===Misuse===
 
[[Tolerance]] is generally seen as a virtue, and this fact is often used to criticize criticism of bad ideas by labeling it as "[[intolerance]]", but this is a [[social intolerance#misuse|misuse]] of the term. Tolerance does not require universal acceptance, but merely an [[open-minded]] examination of the merit of each new idea before judging it.
 
[[Tolerance]] is generally seen as a virtue, and this fact is often used to criticize criticism of bad ideas by labeling it as "[[intolerance]]", but this is a [[social intolerance#misuse|misuse]] of the term. Tolerance does not require universal acceptance, but merely an [[open-minded]] examination of the merit of each new idea before judging it.

Latest revision as of 15:59, 23 November 2012

Overview

Outside of specialized contexts, "tolerance" most commonly refers to social tolerance, i.e. the willingness to tolerate or allow certain kinds of social interactions such as cultural ideas or ways different from one's own. It is characterized by interest in examining previously unfamiliar ideas and a will to find positive attributes in them.

Tolerance has much in common with open-mindedness.

Related

Misuse

Tolerance is generally seen as a virtue, and this fact is often used to criticize criticism of bad ideas by labeling it as "intolerance", but this is a misuse of the term. Tolerance does not require universal acceptance, but merely an open-minded examination of the merit of each new idea before judging it.

Links

Reference