It doesn’t though. Pure unlimited tolerance would include tolerating someone’s breach of contract, logically speaking. Also, this is a dangerous road to go down, because you can rephrase pretty much anything as a contract and justify your actions or beliefs with people breaking it.
The reason these discussions often break down right about here is, IMO, because they have different working definitions of the concept of tolerance itself.
For example, the social contract comment above assumes an active definition like recognizing others’ personal sovereignty, i.e. their right to act and not be acted upon. Here one could imagine people as a group of countries with a multinational peace treaty. For one to be intolerant would be to break the ceasefire and attack another. Neighboring countries are within their right to defend themselves or punish this breach without violating the treaty themselves.
Another popular notion of tolerance would be better-termed “permissiveness,” as it amounts to passive affirmation of others’ value systems. This is the “you’re good, I’m good, we’re all good,” kumbaya definition of tolerance conservative talking heads prefer for numerous reasons.
Pure unlimited tolerance would include tolerating someone’s breach of contract, logically speaking.
That “pure, unlimited tolerance” is what they mean by tolerance as a moral standard. Tolerance as a contract is “we have each entered into an agreement to be tolerant of each other. If you are not tolerant of me, you have broken the terms of our agreement, so I will not be tolerant of you.”
I don’t see a slippery slope here; I’d be interested to hear more about why this is a dangerous road to go down.
Saw this a while ago and it solves that “paradox” nicely.
The real paradox is this opinion coming from Twitter
It doesn’t though. Pure unlimited tolerance would include tolerating someone’s breach of contract, logically speaking. Also, this is a dangerous road to go down, because you can rephrase pretty much anything as a contract and justify your actions or beliefs with people breaking it.
The reason these discussions often break down right about here is, IMO, because they have different working definitions of the concept of tolerance itself.
For example, the social contract comment above assumes an active definition like recognizing others’ personal sovereignty, i.e. their right to act and not be acted upon. Here one could imagine people as a group of countries with a multinational peace treaty. For one to be intolerant would be to break the ceasefire and attack another. Neighboring countries are within their right to defend themselves or punish this breach without violating the treaty themselves.
Another popular notion of tolerance would be better-termed “permissiveness,” as it amounts to passive affirmation of others’ value systems. This is the “you’re good, I’m good, we’re all good,” kumbaya definition of tolerance conservative talking heads prefer for numerous reasons.
That “pure, unlimited tolerance” is what they mean by tolerance as a moral standard. Tolerance as a contract is “we have each entered into an agreement to be tolerant of each other. If you are not tolerant of me, you have broken the terms of our agreement, so I will not be tolerant of you.”
I don’t see a slippery slope here; I’d be interested to hear more about why this is a dangerous road to go down.