Lexington Books
Pages: 304
Trim: 6½ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-3017-0 • Hardback • October 2017 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-1-4985-3018-7 • eBook • October 2017 • $122.50 • (£95.00)
Vicki A. Spencer is associate professor of political theory at the University of Otago.
Introduction, by Vicki A. Spencer
Part I: The West
Chapter 1: William of Ockham and Medieval Discourses on Toleration, by Takashi Shogimen
Chapter 2: The Metaphysics of Toleration in American Indian Philosophy, by Scott L. Pratt
Chapter 3: Human Fallibility and Locke’s Doctrine of Toleration, by Vicki A. Spencer
Chapter 4: Pierre Bayle and Benjamin Constant on Toleration, by Ken Tsutsumibayashi
Part II: Southwest Asia
Chapter 5: The Ottomans and Toleration, by Karen Barkey
Chapter 6: Tolerance and Pluralism in Islamic Thought and Praxis, by Asma Afsaruddin
Part III: South Asia
Chapter 7: Tolerance in Nepal Mandala: Communal Relations and Royal Religious Patronage in Malla-Era Kathmandu, by Anne Mocko
Chapter 8: The One in the Many in the Songs of Poet-saints of Medieval India: A Cultural Stance on Tolerance, by Neelima Shukla-Bhatt
Chapter 9: The Limits of Intolerance: A Comparative Reflection on India’s Experiment with Tolerance, by Purushottama Bilimoria
Chapter 10: The Tolerations of Theravada Buddhism, by Benjamin Schonthal
Part IV: East Asia
Chapter 11: An Intolerant but Morally Indifferent Regime? Heresy and Immorality in Early Modern Japan, by Koichiro Matsuda
Chapter 12: Two Conceptions of Tolerating in Confucian Thought, by Kam-por Yu
Chapter 13: All Embracing: A Laozian Version of Toleration, by Xiaogan Liu
Conclusion, by Vicki A. Spencer
Suggested Further Readings
About the Contributors
Vicki A. Spencer has brought together a distinguished group of scholars from across the globe with the shared aim of challenging the complacent view held by many contemporary philosophers that the idea of toleration is a wholly modern phenomenon, founded on liberalism and distinctively Western in origin. The contributors disrupt these assumptions by means of careful examination of writings reflecting a broad range of intellectual traditions, including Islam, Buddhism, Confucianism, Hinduism, and Native American thought, as well as unappreciated Western sources of tolerant principles. These authors collectively reveal not only the limitations of modern Occidental chauvinism concerning tolerance, but also the conceptual strengths of alternative approaches to the philosophy of liberalism commonly regarded to be coextensive with the theory of toleration per se. Taken as a whole, this book represents a significant step forward in our understanding of the many possible paths that the defense of a tolerant respect for human diversity might follow.
— Cary Nederman, Texas A&M University