Be Careful How You Think: Tolerance Versus Acceptance



Posted: Tuesday, July 03, 2007

by Victorya Chase
http://victoryachasegoestotherapy.blogspot.com

Language is of the highest importance to me, because it is how I define myself and others. One thing I’m saddened of is how the connotations are being stripped from words and our language sanitized. Thus, nowadays it seems people don’t know how to express emotions as much as they are no longer inherent in our speech as they used to be. Maybe it’s just me. When I talk to my class most have never heard of a connotation and don’t know what a word means beyond the definition. One of the ‘tips and tricks’ for the GRE is that if you don’t know a word see how it sounds, how does it make you feel? Then you can usually eliminate a choice from there.

But many can’t say that a word makes them feel anything, except perhaps confused.

That is my lead in to two words that are thrown around all over the place: tolerance and acceptance. Let’s look at these words, shall we?

Tolerance: The act of enduring. “She is tolerant to loud music." My favorite is this part on dictionary.com, “Tolerance, agree in allowing the right of something that one does not approve."

I love that, the right of something that one does not approve. I often hear tolerance preached and think people have no idea what they are saying. They are saying, “even though I don’t approve of what you’re doing, I’ll allow it." It’s just a nicer form of the missionary complex.

I grew up in ‘the church’ and have many issues with them. They taught tolerance as well. It was the type of tolerance where they stressed that we, the God-fearing Christians were right and the others wrong but since their horrendous beliefs in something outside of our own only hurt themselves, we would tolerate them and in our tolerance they could see God.

Tolerance. I call bullcrap on the whole idea. I tolerated a lot growing up; I endured so many layers of hell. But what saved me is that I recognized it as wrong. Yet, when people go around saying how great they are as a person for tolerating others or how great we are as a nation because we tolerate so many different cultural groups I do say bullcrap, because to tolerate is to assume that you are right, and don’t approve of the others. In fact, it still creates that mindset of ‘the other’ which is the main way to rationalize someone as less than human and that makes killing easier to do.

Gotta love rationalization.

Now, on to acceptance, which per dictionary.com, is, "the mental attitude that something is believable and should be accepted as true," or simply, “favorable reception, approval."

Isn’t that what we really want for each other? Not tolerance, but a ‘favorable reception’? Isn’t that what we need to offer those that differ from us, approval and a positive mental attitude?

I wonder if I’m the only one that sees such a difference between tolerance and approval and how this trains our thinking. I really think it does affect how we view the world. If we only tolerate things we are still setting a standard of right and wrong (with us in the right) that sets up that dangerous other. With acceptance we are acknowledging that, as the Muppets said, “Peoples is peoples." We need to accept others, accept their customs and cultures (and language) and not merely ‘tolerate’ them because we have too.

Does that make sense, or am I talking in circles?



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Top-level comments on this article: (4 total)
» left by Anonymous 4 years 164 days ago.
So you won't accept other people who want to be tolerant and who see the world in a different way (i.e. that there are clear rights and wrongs)?
» left by Anonymous 4 years 164 days ago.
You say, "Tolerance. I call bullcrap on the whole idea. " So, you are not accepting of tolerance. This makes you intolerant!
» left by fFDAS 91 days 8 hours ago.
AGREED!
» left by Anonymous 4 years 164 days ago.
There are no "others"? Is every belief system and behavior "ok" or "good". Are there no lines in the sand? Are there no behaviors or belief systems that are wrong? If you practice the kind of "acceptance" you are advocating, what would be your view of Hitler or a serial killer? Once you judge the behavior, you are no longer being accepting.
» left by Jean Purcell
3 years 283 days ago.
39 fans.
Hi, Victorya, I think you made a good point about tolerance often signifying a superior attitude. I think that can be the case. As for acceptance, I accept the fact that there are people, perhaps many, who will disagree with my views. That is going to happen throughout life. Many think that having strong beliefs means that one is intolerant or unaccepting. Strong beliefs, however, mean that there are certain beliefs that we hold, and therefore there are other opposite beliefs that we do not accept for ourselves. However, that is different from judging others. I think we need to judge/assess theories and opinions. That's my take on it. Your article stimulates a lot of thought about words that are easily misunderstood, misused...or viewed differently. I am not sure if I understand all of your meaning, but I think the discussion is important.
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