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Preliminary communication

More Than Tolerance: Ethics for a Multicultural Society

Patrick Giddy orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-6804-3731 ; University of Kwazulu-Natal, School of Religion, Philosophy and Classics, Durban, South Africa


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Abstract

Contemporary multicultural societies for the most part frame themselves in terms of a procedural rather than substantive ethics, by emphasizing rightness rather than goodness, and elevate tolerance to key value. But this cannot of itself replace a substantive and motivating norm of the good life and can be experienced as a loss, disaffecting citizens. It will also fail to confront the limits of acceptable action, the unconditionality associated with the moral point of view. The classical tradition in ethics, proposing a norm of human flourishing, can be re-expressed to bring out this unconditionality. I point to the counter tradition of ethical reasoning in terms of proportionality, exampled in the case of war ethics, as useful and draw on an alternative concept of democracy in terms not of formal or substantive rights but of an ethic of participation.

Keywords

ethics; classical Greek philosophy; rightness/goodness; multiculturalism; tolerance; Spaemann; unconditionality; proportionalist reasoning

Hrčak ID:

101735

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/101735

Publication date:

19.2.2013.

Article data in other languages: croatian french german

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