"Error has no rights" (Latin: Error non habet ius) is a historical Catholic and traditionalist Catholic principle. It asserts that it is the responsibility of governments to suppress non-Catholic religions as they do not have a right to express publicly any religion outside of Catholicism which should be the only religion allowed by the State, but had the right to privately profess and practice any religion. Alternatively, it asserts that while non-Catholics had civil or political rights, there is no theological toleration for such religious beliefs. It was still the official position of the Catholic Church in the 1950s, and was repudiated or superseded in the Second Vatican Council of 1962–1965 by Dignitatis humanae. It is also argued, based on the interpretation that the moral right to e
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| - El error no tiene derechos (es)
- Error has no rights (en)
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| - "El error no tiene derechos" (en latín, Error non habet ius) es el principio católico romano de que los no católicos romanos no deben tener ningún derecho civil o político y no tienen el derecho de expresar públicamente ninguna religión fuera del catolicismo romano, pero tenían la derecho a profesar y practicar en forma privada cualquier religión; además, este principio establece que el catolicismo romano debe ser la única religión permitida por el Estado. (es)
- "Error has no rights" (Latin: Error non habet ius) is a historical Catholic and traditionalist Catholic principle. It asserts that it is the responsibility of governments to suppress non-Catholic religions as they do not have a right to express publicly any religion outside of Catholicism which should be the only religion allowed by the State, but had the right to privately profess and practice any religion. Alternatively, it asserts that while non-Catholics had civil or political rights, there is no theological toleration for such religious beliefs. It was still the official position of the Catholic Church in the 1950s, and was repudiated or superseded in the Second Vatican Council of 1962–1965 by Dignitatis humanae. It is also argued, based on the interpretation that the moral right to e (en)
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| - "Error has no rights" (Latin: Error non habet ius) is a historical Catholic and traditionalist Catholic principle. It asserts that it is the responsibility of governments to suppress non-Catholic religions as they do not have a right to express publicly any religion outside of Catholicism which should be the only religion allowed by the State, but had the right to privately profess and practice any religion. Alternatively, it asserts that while non-Catholics had civil or political rights, there is no theological toleration for such religious beliefs. It was still the official position of the Catholic Church in the 1950s, and was repudiated or superseded in the Second Vatican Council of 1962–1965 by Dignitatis humanae. It is also argued, based on the interpretation that the moral right to error is distinct from the legal right, that this principle was not superseded by Dignitatis Humanae. (en)
- "El error no tiene derechos" (en latín, Error non habet ius) es el principio católico romano de que los no católicos romanos no deben tener ningún derecho civil o político y no tienen el derecho de expresar públicamente ninguna religión fuera del catolicismo romano, pero tenían la derecho a profesar y practicar en forma privada cualquier religión; además, este principio establece que el catolicismo romano debe ser la única religión permitida por el Estado. (es)
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