I have to wonder. I certainly don't see it being practiced anywhere, not by religious belief systems, not by athiestic belief systems, not by anyone, really. Guided by this observation, I have to wonder if such a thing really can exist. Can a particular system of beliefs actually tolerate the existence of another without needing to wipe it from the face of the earth?
It would seem to me that any belief system, in order to have something to offer it's adherers, has to be right. Whether that rightness comes from divinity, reason, spirituality, or even LSD induced visions is largely irrelevant. The system has to claim to have some kind of knowledge. If it makes no claims of knowing something, there's really nothing to believe there. It's a non-system.
And each belief system, in order for it's knowledge to be correct, has to have a universal way to achieve that correctness - there is a right way to get knowledge, this is it, and this is what comes from that. It seems that it really does have to be an intrisically valid method to aquire information too - if it's just an abritrary method with nothing firmer to support it then whimsy, any knowledge it imparts is itself nothing more then whimsy, and this really devalues the belief system. Why believe something if you know it's only true cause you abrtriraly decided it to be so?
From here, I can't see how tolerance between belief systems could exist. Each system needs to be right to be anything, and each system pretty much needs to have a singular universal method of being right so as not to be a house of cards. The system NEEDS to be right to exists, and other systems, which also claim to be right are a major problem. If you're lucky, they won't make any claims in similar areas, and you can hit an uneasy truce, but in most situations there is going to be overlap where there are contradictions. Then they can't both be right, and since being wrong is death to a belief system, I don't see how any two systems could co-exist unless they're so widely disparate that they never make any overlapping claims. And since most belief systems are set up to deal with the things we can't directly experience - death, the infinite, the origin of the universe are very common themes.
As such, I don't think true tolerance can exist. At best, we'll be able to pull one belief system being dominant and telling the others "You're wrong, but we don't mind you being wrong, just don't expect to make any decisions."
Am I off track here? Is it possible for a belief system to be absolutely wrong but remain intact? What do you guys think?
P.S. Can we keep 'real world' examples out of this as much as possible? I don't really care if you think specific system X can't tolerate specific system Y, and that would just make things turn ugly. Lets keep it to the purely theoretical questions, please?
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