Reason Echoes
This overview of the radio address "The Unsung Virtue of Tolerance" by English journalist and commentator E. M. Forster, delivered in July 1941 during World War II, argues that tolerance, not love, is the essential psychological foundation for rebuilding civilization after the war. Forster asserts that while everyone is preoccupied with architectural and political plans for reconstruction, a sound state of mind is required for any lasting structure. He dismisses the common belief that universal love can succeed in public affairs, calling it unrealistic and dangerous sentimentality because people can only genuinely love those they know personally. Instead, Forster champions the "dull," "negative" virtue of tolerance—the act of merely "putting up with people"—as the practical and necessary approach for different races, classes, and nations to coexist in a crowded post-war world, citing historical figures like Emperor Asoka and Erasmus as proponents of this overlooked ideal.
9 episoder
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