Posted on February 18, 2008 by John Uebersax
I recently ran across the following quote from 20th-century Christian author, C. S. Lewis in his book, The Abolition of Man. These remarks preface an assemblage of quotes that relate to what Lewis termed Natural Law, which he more or less equated with ancient Chinese term, the Tao:
The idea of collecting independent testimonies presupposes [...]
Filed under: Christian-Muslim relations, Cognitive psychology, Cultural psychology, Culture of peace, religion | Leave a Comment »
Posted on February 18, 2008 by John Uebersax
At the Watchblog Third Party Website, Joel S. Hirschhorn wrote an good article titled The Evolution of Evil. He identifies as an essential problem the current two-party system. To quote Joel:
Most corrupt and legally sanctioned forms of tyranny hide in plain sight as democracies with free elections…. Nothing conceals tyranny better than elections. [...]
Filed under: Cultural psychology, Election 2008, Politics, Renewing America, Third parties, philosophy, religion | Leave a Comment »
Posted on January 30, 2008 by John Uebersax
Comments on “A Common Word between Us”
In October of 2007, 138 Muslim leaders, clerics, and scholars published an open letter to His Holiness Pope Benedict XVI titled, A Common Word between Us and You. The letter was unambiguously positive and well motivated. The summary of the letter states succinctly (and correctly): “The future [...]
Filed under: Christian-Muslim relations, Cognitive psychology, Cultural psychology, Culture of peace, International Affairs, religion | Leave a Comment »
Posted on January 21, 2008 by John Uebersax
On Religious Inclusivism and Exclusivism
John S. Uebersax
Summary
Here we make two main points:
Religious inclusivism – the view that “all religions are but different paths to the same goal” — is often presented as a means to promote peace. However, if religions actually are true to varying degrees, then radical inclusivism merely tries to sweep genuine [...]
Filed under: Christian-Muslim relations, Cultural psychology, Culture of peace, philosophy, religion | Leave a Comment »