From tolerance to the secular State in Italy

The discourse on tolerance began over two centuries ago and yet is still unfinished. Was Voltaire in 1763 with his “Treatise on Tolerance”, condemned religious intolerance persuaded by religious fanaticism of the judgment of the Court of Toulouse. Although the idea of tolerance was born in Europe, i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Renata Tokrri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academicus 2015-01-01
Series:Academicus International Scientific Journal
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.academicus.edu.al/nr11/Academicus-MMXV-11-051-062.pdf
_version_ 1819004621894451200
author Renata Tokrri
author_facet Renata Tokrri
author_sort Renata Tokrri
collection DOAJ
description The discourse on tolerance began over two centuries ago and yet is still unfinished. Was Voltaire in 1763 with his “Treatise on Tolerance”, condemned religious intolerance persuaded by religious fanaticism of the judgment of the Court of Toulouse. Although the idea of tolerance was born in Europe, it saw and still sees intolerance. Intolerance of yesterday reminds us wars, inquisitions and crusades, instead the modern Europe shows that even between globalization and multiculturalism often proves incapable of “import” different cultures. But from the legal point of view the term tolerance is far from that of secularism. It follows that individuals in a system that tolerates doesn’t enjoy equality their fundamental rights, because they are not legally placed on the same level. Legal Italian tolerance experience has been for many years a condition for the cults other than Catholic. The Albertine Statute in 1848 welcomed it in the article 1, and it was the task of the new Constitution outlining the principles of a State not only secular but also pluralistic.
first_indexed 2024-12-20T23:39:49Z
format Article
id doaj.art-f63a140f655648acad68eef3321d23d9
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2079-3715
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-20T23:39:49Z
publishDate 2015-01-01
publisher Academicus
record_format Article
series Academicus International Scientific Journal
spelling doaj.art-f63a140f655648acad68eef3321d23d92022-12-21T19:23:07ZengAcademicusAcademicus International Scientific Journal2079-37152015-01-01MMXV11516210.7336/academicus.2015.11.04From tolerance to the secular State in ItalyRenata TokrriThe discourse on tolerance began over two centuries ago and yet is still unfinished. Was Voltaire in 1763 with his “Treatise on Tolerance”, condemned religious intolerance persuaded by religious fanaticism of the judgment of the Court of Toulouse. Although the idea of tolerance was born in Europe, it saw and still sees intolerance. Intolerance of yesterday reminds us wars, inquisitions and crusades, instead the modern Europe shows that even between globalization and multiculturalism often proves incapable of “import” different cultures. But from the legal point of view the term tolerance is far from that of secularism. It follows that individuals in a system that tolerates doesn’t enjoy equality their fundamental rights, because they are not legally placed on the same level. Legal Italian tolerance experience has been for many years a condition for the cults other than Catholic. The Albertine Statute in 1848 welcomed it in the article 1, and it was the task of the new Constitution outlining the principles of a State not only secular but also pluralistic. http://www.academicus.edu.al/nr11/Academicus-MMXV-11-051-062.pdf tolerance; religion; secularism; multiculturalism
spellingShingle Renata Tokrri
From tolerance to the secular State in Italy
Academicus International Scientific Journal
tolerance; religion; secularism; multiculturalism
title From tolerance to the secular State in Italy
title_full From tolerance to the secular State in Italy
title_fullStr From tolerance to the secular State in Italy
title_full_unstemmed From tolerance to the secular State in Italy
title_short From tolerance to the secular State in Italy
title_sort from tolerance to the secular state in italy
topic tolerance; religion; secularism; multiculturalism
url http://www.academicus.edu.al/nr11/Academicus-MMXV-11-051-062.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT renatatokrri fromtolerancetothesecularstateinitaly