Herbert Marcuse, "Repressive Tolerance" (1965) (Introductory Excerpt) (full text)
THIS essay examines the idea of tolerance in our advanced industrial society. The conclusion reached is that the realization of the objective of tolerance would call for intolerance toward prevailing policies, attitudes, opinions, and the extension of tolerance to policies, attitudes, and opinions which are outlawed or suppressed. In other words, today tolerance appears again as what it was in its origins, at the beginning of the modern period--a partisan goal, a subversive liberating notion and practice. Conversely, what is proclaimed and practiced as tolerance today, is in many of its most effective manifestations serving the cause of oppression.
The author is fully aware that, at present, no power, no authority, no government exists which would translate liberating tolerance into practice, but he believes that it is the task and duty of the intellectual to recall and preserve historical possibilities which seem to have become utopian possibilities--that it is his task to break the concreteness of oppression in order to open the mental space in which this society can be recognized as what it is and does.
Tolerance is an end in itself. The elimination of violence, and the reduction of suppression to the extent required for protecting man and animals from cruelty and aggression are preconditions for the creation of a humane society. Such a society does not yet exist; progress toward it is perhaps more than before arrested by violence and suppression on a global scale. As deterrents against nuclear war, as police action against subversion, as technical aid in the fight against imperialism and communism, as methods of pacification in neo-colonial massacres, violence and suppression are promulgated, practiced, and defended by democratic and authoritarian governments alike, and the people subjected to these governments are educated to sustain such practices as necessary for the preservation of the status quo. Tolerance is extended to policies, conditions, and modes of behavior which should not be tolerated because they are impeding, if not destroying, the chances of creating an existence without fear and misery.
This sort of tolerance strengthens the tyranny of the majority against which authentic liberals protested. The political locus of tolerance has changed: while it is more or less quietly and constitutionally withdrawn from the opposition, it is made compulsory behavior with respect to established policies. Tolerance is turned from an active into a passive state, from practice to non-practice: laissez-faire the constituted authorities. It is the people who tolerate the government, which in turn tolerates opposition within the framework determined by the constituted authorities.
Tolerance toward that which is radically evil now appears as good because it serves the cohesion of the whole on the road to affluence or more affluence. The toleration of the systematic moronization of children and adults alike by publicity and propaganda, the release of destructiveness in aggressive driving, the recruitment for and training of special forces, the impotent and benevolent tolerance toward outright deception in merchandizing, waste, and planned obsolescence are not distortions and aberrations, they are the essence of a system which fosters tolerance as a means for perpetuating the struggle for existence and suppressing the alternatives. The authorities in education, morals, and psychology are vociferous against the increase in juvenile delinquency; they are less vociferous against the proud presentation, in word and deed and pictures, of ever more powerful missiles, rockets, bombs--the mature delinquency of a whole civilization.
//Tolerance is an end in itself. The elimination of violence, and the reduction of suppression to the extent required for protecting man and animals from cruelty and aggression are preconditions for the creation of a humane society.
ReplyDeleteYawn. BS.
Apparent BS that ignores all the knowledge of History and Science.
And are foolishness that trying to pose itself as smartness.
Bur well "hypocrisy -- that is tribute vice paying to virtue"
Google AI:
ReplyDeleteetymology of tolerance
tolerance
/ˈtäl(ə)rən(t)s/
The word tolerance originates from the 15th-century Middle English word toleraunce, which was borrowed from Old French. Its roots trace back to the Latin noun tolerantia, meaning "endurance, fortitude, or a bearing up against pain or hardship," derived from the verb tolerare, which literally means "to bear, sustain, or endure".
Historical Timeline
15th Century: First used in English to describe the physical or mental capacity to endure hardship or pain.
16th Century: The related word toleration emerged to describe permission or license granted by authority, particularly regarding religious worship.
18th Century: The modern social and ethical sense of "being free from bigotry or severity in judging others" developed.
19th Century: The word expanded into technical, scientific, and physiological definitions—such as an allowable margin of mechanical variation or the body's ability to withstand a drug.
The shift from physical endurance to social acceptance happened primarily through the lens of European religious warfare.
The Shift from Pain to Permission
Medieval Roots: In Latin and early French, to "tolerate" meant to bear a physical burden, like carrying a heavy weight or surviving a disease.
The Reformation Trigger (16th Century): The Protestant Reformation shattered Europe's religious unity, sparking devastating wars.
Pragmatic Peace: Rulers realized they could not kill everyone who disagreed with the state religion.
State Permission: "Tolerance" became a political strategy where a king officially permitted a minority religion to exist, even though the king still disliked it.
The Shift from Permission to Social Virtue
The Enlightenment (17th–18th Century): Philosophers like John Locke and Voltaire changed the definition.
Philosophical Redefinition: They argued that tolerance was not a lazy concession by a king, but a moral duty.
Broadening the Scope: The word moved out of strictly religious laws and into everyday human interactions.
Modern Meaning: By the late 1700s, it meant actively rejecting bigotry and choosing not to interfere with others' beliefs.
If you are interested, I can:
Provide quotes from John Locke's letters on tolerance
Explain how the Edict of Nantes used this concept
Discuss how scientific tolerance split off during the Industrial Revolution
Let me know which direction you would like to explore next.
Democracies. What can you do?
ReplyDeleteapplicational vocation
ReplyDeleteKantian ethics rule... "Treat all others as ends unto themselves, not means to ends". Golden rule... "treat others as you would have them treat you". Christian rule... "Love thy neighbor". Secular democracy rule... "tolerance".
DeleteMy engineering rule... 3/4" +/- 1/64" (fake #'s) Let QA inspect and accept or reject parts on that basis. I know, how "intolerant"! To "reject".
DeleteI'm VERY judgemental!
DeleteFor me Evolution is quite enough.
ReplyDeleteWhen towns became cities -- with more and more people living in cramped spaces, tolerance became a must.
Interesting point... especially when you look at a political map (red Republican rural areas vs blue democrat cities) It's the "division of labour" requirements (Durkheim).
DeleteI always though it was a "spatial" (efficiency) factor, not a productive (time efficiency) one.
Self-Reliance vs Other-Reliance. Maybe that's what makes me so "intolerant".
DeleteCommunism maximizes "aggregate efficiencies". That's why I love Bataille. "F*ck Efficiencies" La Part Maudite! Sovereignty!
DeleteThe right to waste the surplus. To shine like the sun, not "horde" every measly photon!
DeleteTo make ones-self anti-fragile, not a cog in the wheel of a social machine.
DeleteSimple, less complex. Less "tech" (external complexity).
DeleteAvoid the "Bronze Age Collapse" (supply chain failures).
DeleteSelf Assemble. Self Moving. Tech to stave off evolution's "natural" selection and energy's entropy processes
Delete...exploit greater energy-density sources. Like nuclear. Or lesser ones. Spintronics. Store energy patterns in time crystals operating at the lowest energy states.
Delete...not the highest (black hole event horizons).
DeleteThere goes my "complexity risk avoidance" huh?
DeleteMeden agan!
There are no single "solutions". Just many trade-offs to consider to arrive at a particular end. And we are all ends unto ourselves in an ethically "tolerant" Kantian world.
DeleteYep. Evolution is enough.
DeleteNewton's Third Law -- to Every action, there is Counteraction.
DeleteOr.,, there's LOTS of Inertia... in this World
I'm watching a Netflix series (by Stephen King) on that now 11.22.63
DeleteAbout historical inertia and trying to change history (JFK assassination). Push against history- history pushes back.
Yeah
DeleteAntispam robots (pre-censure) surptisingly mercyfull today...
ReplyDelete//Communism maximizes "aggregate efficiencies". That's why I love Bataille. "F*ck Efficiencies" La Part Maudite! Sovereignty!
ReplyDeleteCybernetics.
Yawn.
Positive and Negative Feedback loops.
And one need BOTH
for any sane system.
Yawn
...but how much redundancy do you need. NASA says x3 for human spaceflight. So is 5x too "inefficient"? How good is your parts reliability screening process? 'S' class? NASA design for 3-5 year missions but satellites usually last 20-30. Yoyager is still going (since '77).
DeleteAt Bethlehem Steel engineers were fired if an electric power transmission tower didn't fail if you grossly exceeded the static and/ or dynamic design loads. Every extra pound of steel used in its' construction was a reduction in profits (since they built millions of steel towers to the design).
DeletePragmatism
DeleteYawn
Better is the enemy of "good enough".
DeleteTech(s) … is about it, every time. Yawn.
DeleteMeden agan!
Deleteps - Unlike you I have no commodity fetish. I don't require them to mediate social relations (although with you via internet, not true). They would be conducted face-to-face.
DeleteOur collective consciousness has been "externalized" and our individual consciousnesses isolated and alienated. We no longer "love our neighbors". We love our I-phones.
Delete...but more than that, we love ourselves (Narcissus & Echo).
DeleteH.G. Wells, "The Machine Stops".
DeleteOooops. E.M. Forester, "The Machine Stops".
Delete//...but more than that, we love ourselves (Narcissus & Echo).
ReplyDeleteOf course.
As Golem explained -- if we'd not be that way -- we'd not existed.
Instinct of survival, you know.