English, 03.04.2022 06:30 trinityanne1738
In "Tolerance," the author argues that the people of the world cannot live in
peace through love alone.
Which statements from the text provide relevant evidence for this claim?
Select all that apply.
Tolerance
The fact is we can only love what we know personally. And we
cannot know much.
Tolerance is a very dull virtue. It is boring. Unlike love, it has always
had a bad press.
I don't then regard tolerance as a great eternally established divine
principle, though I might perhaps quote "In my Father's house are
many mansions" in support of such a view. It is just a makeshift,
suitable for an overcrowded and overheated planet.
It [love) has been tried again and again: by the Christian civilizations
of the Middle Ages, and also by the French Revolution, a secular
movement which reasserted the brotherhood of man. And it has
always failed.
Answers: 3
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In "Tolerance," the author argues that the people of the world cannot live in
peace through love a...
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