Search results for "Toleration"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

Some Remarks on the Concept of Toleration

1997

The paper contains a conceptual analysis of “act of toleration” and the property of “being tolerant”. Being tolerant is understood as a dispositional property of persons manifested in what the author calls the “circumstances of toleration”. The main circumstances distinguished are: a tendency to prohibit a certain behaviour and the competence to determine the deontic status of the behaviour in question. An act of toleration, then, consists in not prohibiting (or cancelling the prohibition of) that behaviour. It is argued that this requires the existence of two different normative systems, the “basic system”, and the “justifying system”. Acts of toleration must be based on reasons coming fro…

Competence (law)Property (philosophy)Normative systemsAcquiescencemedia_common.quotation_subjectDeontic logicPhilosophyTolerationLawmedia_commonEpistemologyRatio Juris
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Religious toleration and the limits of liberal secularism: The case of India

2019

In recent years there has been a resurgence of public discourse about the role of tolerance as one of the key elements of the Western philosophical heritage. The fact that Western societies remain ...

Cultural Studies060101 anthropologymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesReligious studiesEnvironmental ethics06 humanities and the artsToleration050601 international relations0506 political scienceKey (music)Political sciencePublic discourse0601 history and archaeologySecularismmedia_commonSikh Formations
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Representation and Ostensible Authority in Medieval Learned Law

2019

When is it possible to hold valid an act done unlawfully? To answer the question, medieval civil lawyers focused mainly on the case of a slave elected praetor in the mistaken belief that he was a Roman citizen. Most jurists argued that the validity of an act should depend on the validity of its source. But whilst early civil lawyers thought that the source was the person vested with some specific powers (such as the judge, the notary, etc.), later on they began to think of the person as representative of an office, and to ascribe the acts directly to the office itself. This evolution – and so, the foundations of the concept of ostensible authority – was due to the influence of canon lawyers…

Settore IUS/19 - Storia Del Diritto Medievale E Modernorepresentation heresy toleration ostensible authority
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