Veitch, James2019-09-252019-09-252014-05-3120149782940428694http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/207687Religious pluralism and religious fundamentalism4 are in opposition to each other: one leads to the acceptance and affirmation of diversity as a primary given in our modern world and the other to its rejection. One maintains that there are different religious worldviews that have stood the test of time and these can be accommodated (sometimes critically) within the global world and the other claims that among the many there is only one right way to being religious and that seeks to impose its view on and over othersPages:195-226engCreative Commons Copyright (CC 2.5)FundamentalismReligious pluralismGlobal ethicsPolitical ethicsEconomic ethicsCultural ethicsReligious ethicsMethods of ethicsBioethicsCommunity ethicsEnvironmental ethicsPluralism and diversity in an age of radical religion and violenceBook chapter