Practices of Tolerance: The Significance of Common Sense in Settings of Dense Coexistence
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. On the Distinction between Consensus and Common Sense
“Common sense which the French so suggestively call the ‚good sense’, le bon sens, discloses to us the nature of the world insofar as it is a common world; we owe to it the fact that our strictly private and ‚subjective‘ five senses and their sensory data can adjust themselves to a nonsubjective and ‚objective‘ world which we have in common and share with others.”
3. Tolerance between Rejection, Forbearance and Recognition
- The “permission conception”, whereby a more powerful social majority tolerates the deviating values of a minority as long as they do not exceed the limits set by the more powerful group.
- The “coexistence conception”, in which individuals or groups in power-symmetrical constellations practice tolerance as a modus vivendi in the interest of avoiding conflict.
- The “respect conception” of tolerance, in which the tolerant parties respect the equal freedom and the equal rights of the other members of a legally constituted community in the sense of formal equality or of qualitative equality sensitive to the form of life.
- The “esteem conception”, in which certain ideological, cultural and religious differences between the tolerant parties are mutually appreciated as valuable and certain other aspects of the different way of life are rejected.13
- Liberalist currents prefer the “respect conception”. They may draw primarily on the work of John Rawls, who sees in two fairness principles, namely, the principle of liberty and equality and the principle of difference, an “overarching consensus” as the basis of social integration in the face of pluralism of conflicting doctrines of the good life (Rawls 1993, p. 144f). To elevate these intuitive foundations of well-ordered societies to the rank of a public conception of justice and to further stabilise pluralistic societies, Rawls takes the path of the public use of reason. Thus, the principles of justice and the well-considered judgements of individuals shall be balanced. What applies to coexistence and political tolerance in democratic constitutional states according to Rawls does of course not necessarily apply to the same extent to coexistence in social life contexts with inescapable proximity such as nurseries, schools or specific workplaces. However, a clever modus vivendi and a “prudential tolerance” (Höffe 2000, p. 74) that is more modest in terms of its demands for consensus or recognition often appear to be deficient from the perspective of concepts of tolerance which—like Rawls himself or Jürgen Habermas—emphasise that tolerance relates primarily to consensus (Habermas 2008, pp. 251–70).
- Communitarian currents refer primarily to the “coexistence conception” of tolerance. As a prominent protagonist of this current, Michael Walzer has developed the concept of tolerance under the premise of a “politics of difference”, whereby tolerance is a modus vivendi of culturally and religiously diversified groups whose interest is not in overarching coexistence, but in self-preservation (Walzer 1997; see also Walzer 2000, pp. 214–30). Walzer thus makes the acceptance of differences the basic category of coexistence. Unlike Charles Taylor, another protagonist of a politics of difference, Walzer turns tolerance from an exception into a rule of social coexistence between groups (Bubner 2000, pp. 45–59). At the interpersonal level, however, the sensorium of the actors involved is not only focused on the perception of differences but also on the perception of similarities and positive aspects of other ways of life in the sense of Forst’s “esteem conception” of tolerance. Walzer’s concept of tolerance faces difficulties in adequately reflecting the multidimensionality of tolerance constellations in the coexistence of people. Without forbearance, living together within heterogeneous groups would not be possible. However, a comprehensive understanding of tolerance includes the aspect of selectively appreciating differences and finding oneself in others.
4. Practices of Tolerance in Dense Contexts of Cultural and Religious Diversity: The Example of Educational Institutions
5. The Contribution of Religious Ethics to Practices of Tolerance in a Conflicted World
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In the same year, the religious and ideological distribution in Germany was as follows: around 24.8 per cent were members of the Catholic Church, 22.6 per cent were members of the Protestant church, 3.7 per cent were denominational Muslims, 5.1 per cent belonged to other religious communities and 43.8 per cent of the population were non-denominational (fowid 2023). |
2 | See researches and models by Bennett (1986), Arasaratnam and Doerfel (2005), Perez et al. (2015), Bennett (2017) and Deardorff (2020a). |
3 | Aspects of inter-religious and intercultural dialogue are part of our blended-learning concept but are not the focus of this paper. Instead, we will concentrate on settings of high religious diversity that live on practices that facilitate peaceful coexistence rather than explicit dialogue. For more information on activities that foster inter-religious dialogue see Lehmann (2020, pp. 237–54). |
4 | |
5 | See Popper’s formulation of the paradox of tolerance: “Unlimited tolerance must lead to the disappearance of tolerance… We must therefore claim, in the name of tolerance, the right not to tolerate intolerance“ (Popper [1945] 2012, p. 581). |
6 | |
7 | This distinction can be traced back to Ludwig Wittgenstein who insisted that rules neither interpret themselves nor imply the rules for their own application (Wittgenstein 1958). The only way to find out whether one follows a rule correctly is by shared practices (Holtzman and Leich 2014). |
8 | In the following, we are using the terms “common sense” and “sensus communis” interchangeably. |
9 | Our translation. |
10 | |
11 | For the international discourse see Vilà, Freixa and Aneas (Vilà et al. 2020, pp. 255–73), Morgan and Sandage (2016, pp. 129–58), Jackson (2005) and Brown (2000, pp. 257–81). For the German-speaking debate see Auernheimer (2012, p. 20f.) and Diehm (2010, pp. 119–39). Concerning “recognition“ in religious pedagogy see Orth (2011, pp. 84–111). |
12 | For the international debate see, e.g., Council of Europe (2023), Deardorff (2009) and Leeds-Hurwitz (2013). With regard to the German-speaking debate see the concept of constructive tolerance in religious pedagogics by Adam (1996, pp. 84–96) and the concept of reflexive tolerance by Krimmer (2013). For inter-religious pedagogics see Schweitzer (2014), Englert (1995, pp. 161–77) and Grümme (2017). Regarding the role of tolerance in educational sciences see Drerup (2017, pp. 206–24; 2022, pp. 40–57) and Mikhail (2022, pp. 5–21). |
13 | |
14 | It needs to be noted that the fixation on diversity or otherness is in danger of contributing to exclusion through othering and stigmatisation dynamics (Mecheril et al. 2010). |
15 | See Dietrich Bonhoeffer’s doctrine of the mandates: “We speak of divine mandates rather than divine orders, because thereby their character as divinely imposed tasks [Auftrag], as opposed to determinate forms of being, becomes clearer.“ (Bonhoeffer 2005, p. 68) For more information on Bonhoeffer see the articles in Ziegler and Mawson (2019). Following this critical path of social thought, please see also Ernst Wolf‘s theological definition of institutions: “Institutionen sind soziale Daseinsstrukturen der geschaffenen Welt als Einladung Gottes zu ordnender und gestaltender Tat in der Freiheit des Glaubensgehorsams gegen sein Gebot“ (Wolf 1988, p. 173). |
16 |
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Heuser, S.; Wolf, A. Practices of Tolerance: The Significance of Common Sense in Settings of Dense Coexistence. Religions 2024, 15, 562. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050562
Heuser S, Wolf A. Practices of Tolerance: The Significance of Common Sense in Settings of Dense Coexistence. Religions. 2024; 15(5):562. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050562
Chicago/Turabian StyleHeuser, Stefan, and Alexandra Wolf. 2024. "Practices of Tolerance: The Significance of Common Sense in Settings of Dense Coexistence" Religions 15, no. 5: 562. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050562
APA StyleHeuser, S., & Wolf, A. (2024). Practices of Tolerance: The Significance of Common Sense in Settings of Dense Coexistence. Religions, 15(5), 562. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15050562