
From Religious Diversity to Religious
Pluralism
Reflection by Diana Eck, panel
response and roundtable discussions
Plenary Session II
"Pluralism is an encounter of all of our differences. It is a reconstruction
and renegotiation of our common life in light of that encounter. Pluralism
requires something of us; it is not a given; it is an achievement.
What is required is the kind of six years of work that the Multi-faith Council
here at Wellesley has put into it. This is one of the stories of the movement
from diversity to pluralism that is still being written."
-- Diana Eck
"...education is neither objectivist nor subjectivist but continually
dialogical, bringing our own experience into encounter with that of another
and returning to ourselves to evaluated what it is that we have learned and
to rethink our own presuppositions in light of that learning."
-- Diana Eck
"We've been so intent on butting our heads against the prevailing secular-rationalist
culture that we're only now beginning to notice that that culture has shifted
dramatically to provide significant open spaces for religious ways of learning
and understanding...
We need a change whereby our colleges and universities become at one and
the same time, through our cooperative vision, first--welcoming of spiritual
perspectives, second--supportive of particular religious expressions, and
third--exemplary of the way in which all spiritual paths are finally leading
to the same sacred ground."
-- Susan Laemmle - Rabbi and Dean of Religious Life at the University of
Southern California