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Whatever its present totalitarian tendencies, Islam began as non-exclusivist and, for long eras, in many places, maintained a toleration of other faiths that Christianity could not match.
We believe it is possible to find common ground on the basis of respect for difference and a toleration of others.
In 1955, Brennan spoke before the Monmouth Rotary Club, in New Jersey, on the subject of the Fifth Amendment, and said, "Frankness with ourselves must compel the acknowledgment that our resentment toward those who invoked its protection led us into a toleration of some of the very abuses which brought the privilege into being so many centuries ago.
Safety experts tell me that in their opinions, the investigation of the Yale incident is also likely to fault a toleration of unsafe conditions, such as permitting students to operate power equipment without another person available in case of emergency.
But this extreme position suffers the familiar drawbacks of unregulated market economies: a toleration of severely harmful transactions (e.g., purchasing tickets to a match of gladiatorial combat), the exacerbation of economic inequalities, and a permissive stance to transactions with long-term adverse consequences, which lead to "tragedies of the commons" and environmental devastation.
As in the case of Moore it is tempting to interpret his commitment to a timeless world of universals as pointing if not to an endorsement at least to a toleration of a position that is difficult to distinguish from some version of an ontological idealism.
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(I've noticed far more contemporary poetry as well as a perverse toleration of hardcover editions).
First, we might expect them to demonstrate a high toleration of uncertainty, since I am assuming that uncertainty is the rule rather than the exception in today's organisations.
The increase of dissent from the established churches during this period led to a broader toleration of religious diversity, and the democratization of the religious experience fed the fervour that resulted in the American Revolution.
There was the complete disapproval of those who saw only its inherent licentiousness, but from others came at least a tacit toleration of the obviously irrepressible urge to dance.
Might there be the possibility, using a phrase John Rawls (1993) coined in the context of his theory of justice, of a "tolerant" theory of toleration that is at the same time substantive enough to ground and limit toleration?
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com