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THEO-297 Senior Seminar: Religious Pluralism
Spring for 2008-2009
This course will study the relationship between Christianity and other major world religions. Offered from the Christian perspective, it will address the philosophical and theological issues and conflicts that arise in a religiously pluralistic environment. This will include an historical examination of the Christian disposition towards the other religions, the problem of conflicting truth claims, the nature of salvation in the religions, the role of religious language, and the process of interreligious dialogue. The course will critically assess current Christian theological thinking about the other major traditions and offer possibilities for interreligious understanding. (Madigan)

This seminar for senior theology majors in the Religion and Culture track will study the contemporary issue of "pluralism,” that is, how we are to think of and respond to a plurality of religious claims and experiences. This particular section of the seminar will concentrate on theories of plurality and otherness that are not from the explicitly theological tradition, and on instances of the encounter with religious otherness that are not explicitly religious. This semester we will examine the theories of William James, Richard Rorty, and Michel Foucault, and we will then apply them to a variety of films. (Ruf)
Credits: 3.00
Prerequisites: None

Sections:

THEO-297-XX Senior Seminar: Religious Pluralism
Spring for 2008-2009
Faculty:
  • Madigan, Daniel
  • This course will study the relationship between Christianity and other major world religions. Offered from the Christian perspective, it will address the philosophical and theological issues and conflicts that arise in a religiously pluralistic environment. This will include an historical examination of the Christian disposition towards the other religions, the problem of conflicting truth claims, the nature of salvation in the religions, the role of religious language, and the process of interreligious dialogue. The course will critically assess current Christian theological thinking about the other major traditions and offer possibilities for interreligious understanding.
    Credits: 3.00
    Prerequisites: None
    More information
    Look for this course in the schedule of classes.

    The academic department web site for this program may provide other details about this course.

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