1st Edition

Toleration Re-Examined

Edited By Derek Edyvane, Matt Matravers Copyright 2013
    152 Pages
    by Routledge

    152 Pages
    by Routledge

    The problem of how we are to live together in morally and culturally diverse democratic societies is central to modern life. Over the last thirty years, an extensive philosophical literature has developed around the idea of toleration as a way of engaging with that problem. However, recent years have witnessed a growing backlash against the idea of toleration, which is often considered too ‘thin’, or too unambitious an aspiration for liberal democracy. This timely collection of essays from an international field of experts in the history and philosophy of toleration takes stock of this debate and offers a distinctive reassessment of the place of toleration in contemporary political life. Against the general climate of scepticism, the message that emerges from these essays is that toleration remains an extremely powerful idea, and one that must remain central to the political enterprise of forging social unity amid diversity in the twenty-first century.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Critical Review of Social and Political Philosophy.

    1. Introduction: toleration re-examined Derek Edyvane and Matt Matravers

    2. Why the traditional conception of toleration still matters John Horton

    3. Blind spots in the toleration literature John Christian Laursen

    4. Toleration and the Philosophy of Locke’s Politics Timothy Stanton

    5. Toleration in a New Key: Historical and Global Perspectives Cary Nederman

    6. Toleration as Sedition Glen Newey

    7. Must the tolerant person have a sense of humour? On the structure of tolerance as a virtue David Owen

    8. Tolerance and Pain Derek Edyvane

    Biography

    Derek Edyvane is a lecturer in Political Theory at the University of Leeds, UK.

    Matt Matravers is Professor of Political Philosophy and Director of the Morrell Centre for Toleration at the University of York, UK.