We are still looking for a positive case to be made on behalf of liberal toleration. |
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The problem of the urban poor cannot be remedied simply by racial toleration, nor even by recirculating monies and utilities. |
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In a world where civil disobedience was treated with toleration, that might be a good strategy. |
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Open toleration of such attitudes became problematic as Jim became more rigid. |
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Instead they cultivate the value of toleration, which becomes the chief virtue in democratic societies. |
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With varying degrees of consciousness, most Americans seem to appreciate the practical benefits of liberalism and toleration. |
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He should fight against oppression and to establish justice and the broadest principles of religious toleration. |
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I'd like to think my toleration for different races, religions and sexuality is really high because of the way I was raised and my studies. |
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Charles then set about promoting the cause of religious toleration for all non-Anglicans. |
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William agreed to religious toleration and to Parliament's claims to authority. |
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He believed in religious toleration but supported an established church, the Anglican Communion. |
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The multicultural character of societies today renders the mutual toleration of differences important. |
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He praised toleration, yet he advocated an absolute sovereign with total power over intellectual matters. |
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By the Second World War the toleration of COs had begun to be recognized as a touchstone of mature liberalism. |
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What made religious toleration and later freedom of conscience possible in England was not theoretical argument but political necessity. |
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Officially Calvinist, it practiced an enlightened religious toleration that also aided its prosperity. |
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It was also the the first European settlement to proclaim religious toleration. |
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And thus toleration produced not only mutual indulgence, but even religious concord. |
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The verse has on many occasions inspired the noblest thoughts of toleration and charitableness. |
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They also committed the Church to a future Anglican toleration of Protestant dissenters. |
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Although Lord Hoffmann had there used a double negative, he held that toleration by the landowner was consistent with user as of right. |
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Whether mutual repugnance might then one day be transformed into mutual sufferance, or even mutual toleration, remains to be seen. |
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The secret history of toleration has been disclosed to us by that fierce ascetic republican and Calvinistical pope. |
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Under these dispiriting circumstances, the few voices calling for toleration were accorded increased attention. |
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Born in London, he distinguished himself by loyalty in politics and toleration in religion. |
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The result is a toleration of evil in Britain, which is now being shamed and exposed by comparison with the Dutch and Danes. |
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So he began to move away from such division to reluctant toleration of partition of India. |
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His dissertation is a study of the politics of religious toleration in the middle colonies. |
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Liberal ideas first took shape in the struggle for religious toleration in the 16th and 17th centuries. |
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Her desire for religious toleration was in stark contrast to the bigotry that riddled French society. |
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He ignores the long tradition of religious toleration under the Ottoman Empire. |
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They also desired fair trials, religious toleration and vast administrative reforms. |
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There are other forms of religious toleration which are not liberal. |
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He explored the problems that can arise in community living, how to deal with them, the toleration to be shown, what is or isn't acceptable. |
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It is the toleration of these discriminatory norms and values that often paves the way for acts of violence against women to occur. |
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Making religious conservatives feel persecuted, refusing them the dignity of toleration, is unnecessary and probably counterproductive. |
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There's no tradition of toleration of alternative perspectives to policy in governance. |
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Let us accept disagreements with toleration and let us moderate them, in the knowledge that disagreements, too, enrich the human spirit. |
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Is there mere toleration of ad hoc NGO activities or is there closer coordination of public and private responses? |
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The argument for such tacit toleration of illegality is that the laws are unrealistic. |
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But the principle of toleration obliges us to put up with them, while making it plain that we do not share their attitudes. |
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Structural impunity is also a result of the toleration and even complicity of certain branches of the state authority. |
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Awkwardly, however, they usually fail to grant the same toleration of imperfection to arms control, non-proliferation and disarmament agreements. |
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They were not satisfied with toleration towards the Hellenisers. |
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Liberal toleration, founded either on agnosticism about higher goods or on pessimism concerning their realizability, seems to be contemporary humanism's highest ideal. |
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An easy toleration of bad grammar, vulgarities and obscenities in so-called polite discourse has lessened the need for precise speech. |
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It is a controlled strangulation that apparently falls within the generous limits of international toleration. |
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Various schemes of humanitarian protection and of toleration are to mention here. |
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There are important variations, to be sure, in the conception of the extent of the in-group and in the limits of toleration of lying and stealing under certain conditions. |
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We need research and further development work to be carried out on safety and implant toleration. |
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It allowed religious toleration, encouraging Settlements spread, and trade in deerskin, lumber, and beef thrived. |
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Mugger crocodiles are also known to show toleration in group feedings and tend to congregate in certain areas. |
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Such an extreme position endangered the religious toleration constitutionally granted to Unitarians, and Blandrata invited the Unitarian theologian Faustus Socinus from Italy to confute Dávid. |
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The concept lost its pertinence in Germany after the Peace of Augsburg in 1555, which granted toleration to the Lutherans in the territories where they predominated. |
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In 35 years, law and order, and security and religious toleration, have been substituted for rapine, disorder, official tyranny, and religious persecution. |
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There are some lofty magisterial people who assert that so long as men and women live according to the law there will be no need for toleration, but tolerance is more than mere legality. |
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Crucial to this picture of toleration is the cultural distinction between the tribade and what Traub calls the femme. |
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Harmony in the social contract: this means knowing how to live together, greeting differences as a source of nourishment rather than with grudging toleration. |
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David Cameron blames the toleration of such views among Muslims on multiculturalism, which in turn has led to the enduring terrorist threat against the UK from within. |
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On April 3rd Mr Eich resigned, having spent little more than a week in the job. Conservatives have leapt at a chance to expose a double-standard: gay-rights activists demand toleration but dispense little of it themselves. |
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What matters is that we do everything not only to avoid disasters, but also to put an end to the toleration of deliberate, malicious and criminal acts in our waters. |
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Both, the regularisation for vulnerable immigrants and the regularisation as toleration, should be covered by a general reflection of regularisation programmes in Europe. |
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Problems that will come back to haunt Kosovo like toleration of widespread corruption and of powerful, unaccountable partisan political intelligence agencies are being swept under the carpet rather than addressed. |
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The Whigs primarily advocated the supremacy of Parliament, while calling for the toleration for Protestant dissenters. |
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William encouraged the passage of the Toleration Act 1689, which guaranteed religious toleration to Protestant nonconformists. |
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In 1859 an essay by the philosopher John Stuart Mill, entitled On Liberty argues for toleration and individuality. |
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The regime extended toleration to Protestants, including sectaries, but the only significant groups were a small number of Quakers. |
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The Puritan toleration lasted six years, and included all but Papists, Prelatists and those who held objectional doctrines. |
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Theoderic in his final years was no longer the disengaged Arian patron of religious toleration that he had seemed earlier in his reign. |
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The king welcomed the learned and practised toleration towards the several creeds, races and languages of his realm. |
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Despite the original promise of freedom and toleration, conspiracy or complicitousness are either sought out or thrust upon such people. |
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Many exiled Remonstrants began to return to the Netherlands after the death of Prince Maurice in 1625 when toleration was granted to them. |
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Above all, the establishment of toleration helped to weaken the presumption that plurality in matters of faith inevitably caused social disorder. |
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His opponents, predominantly the Tory high churchmen and the Anglican establishment, wanted no toleration but everyone to be forced to be part of the Anglican Church. |
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John Gray argues that the core belief of liberalism is toleration. |
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The wars only concluded when Henry IV of France issued the Edict of Nantes, promising official toleration of the Protestant minority, but under highly restricted conditions. |
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This ended under Pope Clement VIII, who hesitantly accepted King Henry IV's 1598 Edict of Nantes, which granted civil and religious toleration to French Protestants. |
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This was, however, not his main motive for promoting religious toleration. |
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