Religious pluralism

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Abstract

According to religious pluralism, the profound differences among the chief objects of adoration in the great religious traditions are largely due to the different ways in which a single transcendent reality is experienced and conceived in human life. The most prominent developer and defender of religious pluralism in the twentieth century is John Hick. Hick uses the expression 'the Real' to designate the transcendent reality 'authentically experienced' as the different gods and impersonal absolutes worshipped in the major religious traditions. A central claim Hick makes is that, apart from some purely formal characteristics, the Real is ineffable in that the intrinsic properties making up its nature are beyond the scope of any human concepts. I explore this central claim and argue that it implies the dubious, if not incoherent, view that the Real in itself has neither one of many pairs of contradictory properties. © 1999 Cambridge University Press.

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APA

Rowe, W. L. (1999). Religious pluralism. Religious Studies. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S003441259900476X

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