What can the religions contribute to the furthering of a Global Ethic, despite their very different systems of dogmas and symbols? This timely book grapples with my question and offers exciting answers. It also models engagement between the religions, highlighting the differences and nuances between them while also underscoring their desire for peace, understanding, and a certain degree of cooperation.
Hans Küng, Professor Emeritus of Ecumenical Theology, University of Tübingen,Principal author of the Global Ethic
The universal decency of reciprocity between communities and individuals coupled with recognizing the sanctity of the human being transcend historical and cross-border differences. If the world will ever truly become what it was created or evolved to be, we need a Global Ethic. And this creative, critical, and collaborate book pioneers the way. Celebrating particularity as it validates our common humanity. And thats the best ethic of all.
Dwight N. Hopkins, Alexander Campbell Professor of Theology, University of Chicago Divinity School, Author of Being Human: Race, Culture, and Religion
Multi-Religious Perspectives on a Global Ethic: In Search of a Common Morality is an important and well-timed book for scholars and religious leaders that both celebrates and interrogates the Parliament of the Worlds Religions Global Ethic. It is timely, as we confront our current global crisis, that scholars provide critical perspectives on the necessity of religion to speak to larger queries of ethics and morality.
Rosalyn LaPier (Blackfeet/Métis), Associate Professor, Environmental Studies Program, University of Montana, Author of Invisible Reality: Storytellers, Storytakers, and the Supernatural World of the Blackfeet
The Global Ethic is a remarkable collaborative effort to articulate a universal and persuasive account of what it means for conduct to qualify as moral or immoral. This volumes outstanding contributors compare their respective religious traditions ethical thinking to the Global Ethics principles offering nuanced explorations of their traditions and evaluating the consequences of the Global Ethics principles on key issues like womens rights and economic justice.
Purushottama Bilimoria, Senior Lecturer, Graduate Theological Union and University of Melbourne, General Editor of History of Indian Philosophy and Indian Ethics
When our lives have a foundation built upon the codes of conduct expressed in the Global Ethicimparted to humanity over eons from those generative sources of the great saints, prophets and enlightened masters that gave rise to religions, but whose universal teachings transcend religionswe arrive at hallowed ground. The light of wisdom radiates from the meticulous and intense multi-perspectival inquiries presented here on what it means to be human.
Audrey E. Kitagawa, Chair of the Board of Trustees, Parliament of the Worlds Religions