Dictionary Definition
tolerate
Verb
1 put up with something or somebody unpleasant;
"I cannot bear his constant criticism"; "The new secretary had to
endure a lot of unprofessional remarks"; "he learned to tolerate
the heat"; "She stuck out two years in a miserable marriage" [syn:
digest, endure, stick out,
stomach, bear, stand, support, brook, abide, suffer, put up]
2 recognize and respect (rights and beliefs of
others); "We must tolerate the religions of others"
3 have a tolerance for a poison or strong drug or
pathogen; "The patient does not tolerate the anti-inflammatory
drugs we gave him"
4 allow the presence of or allow (an activity)
without opposing or prohibiting; "We don't allow dogs here";
"Children are not permitted beyond this point"; "We cannot tolerate
smoking in the hospital" [syn: allow, permit]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From toleroPronunciation
Verb
- To allow (something
that one dislikes or disagrees with) to exist or occur without
interference.
- I like the way he plays the guitar, but I can't tolerate his
voice when he sings.
- I can tolerate working on Saturdays, but not on Sundays.
- I like the way he plays the guitar, but I can't tolerate his
voice when he sings.
Usage notes
- This is a catenative verb that takes the gerund (-ing). See Appendix:English catenative verbs
Translations
- Arabic:
- Chinese: 忍受 (rěnshòu)
- Dutch: verdragen
- Finnish: suvaita, sietää
- French: tolérer
- German: tolerieren, dulden
- Italian: tollerare
- Japanese: 黙認する (もくにんする, mokunin surú)
- Korean: 참는다 (chamneunda)
- Old English: ābīdan
- Portuguese: tolerar
- Russian: допускать (dopuskát’)
- Spanish: tolerar
- Swedish: tolerera
- Telugu: సహించు (sahinchu)
Synonyms
Extensive Definition
Toleration and tolerance are terms used in
social, cultural and religious contexts to describe
attitudes and practices that prohibit discrimination against
those practices or group memberships that may be disapproved of by
those in the majority. Though developed to refer to the religious
toleration of minority religious sects following the Protestant
Reformation, these terms are increasingly used to refer to a
wider range of tolerated practices and groups, such as the
toleration of sexual practices and orientations, or of political
parties or ideas widely considered objectionable. The principle of
toleration is controversial. Liberal critics may see in it
an inappropriate implication that the "tolerated" custom or
behavior is an aberration or that
authorities have a right to punish difference; such
critics may instead emphasize notions such as civility or
pluralism. Other critics, some sympathetic to traditional
fundamentalism,
condemn toleration as a form of moral
relativism. On the other hand, defenders of toleration may
define it as involving positive regard for difference or,
alternately, may regard a narrow definition of the term as more
specific and useful than its proposed alternatives, since it does
not require false expression of enthusiasm for
groups or practices that are genuinely disapproved of.
Historical development
As a practical matter, governments have always had to consider the question of which groups and practices to tolerate and which to persecute. The earliest known example of ethnic and religious tolerance is found in the Cyrus cylinder, which was declared by Cyrus the Great after he founded the Persian Empire. Similarly, the Edicts of Ashoka issued by Ashoka the Great in the Maurya Empire also declared ethnic and religious tolerance. The later expanding Roman Empire faced the question of whether or to what extent they should permit or persecute the local beliefs and practices of groups inhabiting annexed territories. Jewish or Christian practices or beliefs could be tolerated or vigorously persecuted. Likewise, during the Middle Ages, the rulers of Christian Europe or the Muslim Middle East sometimes extended toleration to minority religious groups, and sometimes did not. Jews in particular suffered under anti-Semitic persecutions in medieval Europe.In Europe, the development of a body of theory on
the subject of toleration didn't begin until the sixteenth and
seventeenth centuries, in response to the Protestant
Reformation and the Wars of
Religion and persecutions that followed the breaks with the
Catholic
Church instigated by Martin
Luther and Huldrych
Zwingli and others. In response to the theory of persecution
that was used to justify wars of religion and the execution of
persons convicted of heresy and witchcraft, writers such as
Sebastian
Castellio and Michel
de Montaigne questioned the morality of religious persecution,
and offered arguments for toleration.
A detailed and influential body of writing on the
question of toleration however, was first produced in Britain in
the Seventeenth Century, during and after the destructive English
Civil Wars. John Milton
and radical Parliamentarians such as Gerrard
Winstanley argued that Christian and Jewish worship should be
protected, and it was during the period that Oliver
Cromwell allowed the return of Jews to England. These early
theories of toleration were limited however, and did not extend
toleration to Roman
Catholics (who were perceived as disloyal to their country) or
atheists (who were held
to lack any moral basis for action). John Locke, in
his
Letter Concerning Toleration and
Two Treatises of Government proposed a more detailed and
systematic theory of toleration, which included a principle of
Separation of Church and State that formed the basis for future
constitutional democracies. The British Toleration
Act of 1689 was the political result of seventeenth century
theorists and political exigency, which despite the limited scope
of the toleration it granted was nevertheless a key development in
the history of toleration, which helped produce greater political
stability in the British Isles. The philosophers and writers of the
Enlightenment,
especially Voltaire and
Lessing,
promoted and further developed the notion of religious tolerance,
which however was not sufficient to prevent the atrocities of the
Reign of
Terror. The incorporation by Thomas
Jefferson and others of Locke's theories of toleration into the
Constitution of the United States of America was arguably more
successful.
Recent development
Though developed to refer to the religious toleration of minority religious sects following the Protestant Reformation, the terms "toleration" and "tolerance" are increasingly used to refer to a wider range of tolerated practices and groups, such as the toleration of sexual practices and orientations, or of political parties or ideas widely considered objectionable. Changing applications and understandings of the term can sometimes make debate on the question difficult.For example, a distinction is sometimes drawn
between mere "Toleration" and a higher notion of "Religious
Liberty":
Some philosophers [. . .] regard toleration and
religious freedom as quite distinct things and emphasize the
differences between the two. They understand toleration to signify
no more than forbearance and the permission given by the adherents
of a dominant religion for other religions to exist, even though
the latter are looked upon with disapproval as inferior, mistaken,
or harmful. In contrast these thinkers recognize religious liberty
as as the recognition of equal freedom for all religions and
denominations without any kind of discrimination among them [. . .]
in the case of religious liberty, no one is rightfully possessed of
the power not to tolerate or to cancel this liberty.
Discussions of toleration therefore often divided
between those who view the term as a minimal and perhaps even
historical virtue (perhaps today to be replaced by a more positive
and robust appreciation of
pluralism or diversity),
and those who view it as a concept with an important continuing
vitality, and who are more likely to use the term in considering
contemporary issues regarding discrimination on the basis of race,
nationality, gender, sexuality, disability, and other
reasons.
There are also debates with regard to the
historical factors that produced the principle of toleration, as
well as to the proper reasons toleration should be exercised, with
some arguing that the growth of skepticism was an important
or necessary factor in the development of toleration, and others
arguing that religious belief or an evolving notion of respect for
individual persons was or is the basis on which toleration was or
should be practiced.
Tolerance and monotheism
One theory of the origins of religious intolerance, propounded by Sigmund Freud in Moses and Monotheism, links intolerance to monotheism. More recently, Bernard Lewis and Mark Cohen have argued that the modern understanding of tolerance, involving concepts of national identity and equal citizenship for persons of different religions, was not considered a value by pre-modern Muslims or Christians, due to the implications of monotheism. The historian G.R. Elton explains that in pre-modern times, monotheists viewed such toleration as a sign of weakness or even wickedness towards God. The usual definition of tolerance in pre-modern times as Bernard Lewis puts it was that:Mark Cohen
states that it seems that all the monotheistic religions in power
throughout the history have felt it proper, if not obligatory, to
persecute nonconforming religions. Therefore, Cohen concludes,
Medieval
Islam and Medieval
Christianity in power should have persecuted non-believers in
their lands and "Judaism, briefly in power during the Hasmonean
period (second century BCE) should have persecuted pagan Idumeans".
Attempts to increase tolerance by applying different rules to
different people would ultimately be self defeating.
Many universities, in attempting to enforce
certain political and ideological viewpoints through means other
than instruction and debate have been come to be viewed by some as
intolerant.
Historically important documents
(Listed chronologically)- Magna Carta
- John Milton, Areopagitica
- John Locke, A Letter Concerning Toleration and the famous Two Treatises of Government (esp. the Second Treatise)
- Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to the United States Constitution
- John Stuart Mill, On Liberty
- Dignitatis Humanae
References
Further reading
- Beneke, Chris (2006) Beyond Toleration: The Religious Origins of American Pluralism (New York: Oxford University Press).
- Budziszewski, J. (1992) True Tolerance: Liberalism and the Necessity of Judgement (New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers).
- Cohen, A.J. (2004) "What Toleration Is" Ethics 115: 68-95
- Jordan, W. K. (1932-40) The Development of Religious Toleration in England (New York: George Allen & Unwin Ltd.)
- Kamen, Henry (1967), The Rise of Toleration (New York: McGraw-Hill).
- Kaplan, Benjamin J. (2007), Divided by Faith: Religious Conflict and the Practice of Toleration in Early Modern Europe (Belknap Press).
- Laursen, John Christian and Nederman, Cary, eds. (1997) Beyond the Persecuting Society: Religious Toleration Before the Enlightenment (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press).
- Mendus, Susan and Edwards, David, eds. (1987) On Toleration (Oxford: Clarendon Press).
- Mendus, Susan, ed. (1988) Justifying Toleration: Conceptual and Historical Perspectives (New York: Cambridge University Press).
- Mendus, Susan (1989) Toleration and the Limits of Liberalism (Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey: Humanities Press).
- Murphy, Andrew R. (2001) Conscience and Community: Revisiting Toleration and Religious Dissent in Early Modern England and America (College Park: Penn State University Press).
- Nicholson, Peter P. (1985) "Toleration as a Moral Ideal" in Aspects of Toleration: Philosophical Studies ed. John Horton and Susan Mendus (New York: Methuan).
- Stetson, Brad and Joseph G. Conti, The Truth about Tolerance: Pluralism, Diversity and the Culture Wars (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, (2005)
- Ten, C.L. (Chin Liew) (2004) A Conception of Toleration (Singapore: Marshall Cavendish International).
- Walsham, Alexandra. (2006) Charitable Hatred: Tolerance and Intolerance in England, 1500-1700 (Manchester University Press).
- Walzer, Michael (1999) On Toleration (New Haven: Yale University Press).
- Zagorin, Perez (2003) How the Idea of Religious Toleration Came to the West (Princeton: Princeton University Press).
See also
External links
- A proposal for a park and monument dedicated to toleration to be located on Governors Island. Proposal made by The Foundation for Historic New Amsterdam.
tolerate in Arabic: تسامح
tolerate in Czech: Tolerance
tolerate in Danish: Tolerance
tolerate in German: Toleranz
tolerate in Estonian: Sallivus
tolerate in Spanish: Tolerancia social
tolerate in Esperanto: Toleremo
tolerate in French: Tolérance
tolerate in Indonesian: Toleransi
tolerate in Italian: Tolleranza
tolerate in Hebrew: סובלנות
tolerate in Georgian: ტოლერანტობა
tolerate in Lithuanian: Tolerancija
tolerate in Hungarian: Tolerancia
tolerate in Dutch: Tolerantie
(maatschappij)
tolerate in Japanese: 寛容
tolerate in Norwegian: Toleranse
tolerate in Polish: Tolerancja
(socjologia)
tolerate in Portuguese: Tolerância
tolerate in Romanian: Toleranţă
tolerate in Russian: Терпимость
tolerate in Simple English: Tolerance
tolerate in Slovak: Tolerancia
(znášanlivosť)
tolerate in Serbian: Толеранција
tolerate in Finnish: Suvaitsevuus
tolerate in Swedish: Tolerans
tolerate in Turkish: Hoşgörü
tolerate in Vlaams: Tolerantie
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abide,
abide with, accept,
admit, allow, be big, be content with, be
easy with, bear, bear with,
bide, blink at, brave, brook, concede, condone, connive at, consent to,
countenance,
disregard, endure, go, hang in, hang in there, hang
tough, have, hear of,
ignore, indulge, judge not, lean over
backwards, listen to reason, live with, lump, lump it, not write off,
overlook, permit, persevere, pocket, put up with, sanction, see both sides, spare
the rod, stand, stand for,
stick, stomach, submit to, suffer, support, suspend judgment,
sustain, swallow, take, take up with, undergo, view with indulgence,
weather, wink
at