ISBN:
9783110340792
Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (XXVI, 574 S.)
Edition:
Online-Ausg.
Series Statement:
Process Thought 24
DDC:
155.2
Keywords:
Intercultural Philosophy Conflict
;
Decision-making
;
Konflikt
;
Entscheidungsfindung
;
Interkulturalität
;
Globalisierung
;
Multikulturelle Gesellschaft
;
Dialog
;
Kulturkonflikt
;
Ethischer Konflikt
;
Konfliktbewältigung
Abstract:
Main description: Intercultural dialogue is often invoked in vague reference to a method that can build cross-cultural understanding and facilitate global policy-making. This book clarifies the theoretical foundations of intercultural dialogue and demonstrates the practical significance of intercultural value inquiry, combining the perspectives of philosophy, conflict research, religious studies, and education.
Abstract:
Biographical note: Johanna Seibt, Aarhus University, Denmark; Jesper Garsdal, Via University College, Aarhus, Denmark.
Note:
FrontmatterContentsAcknowledgementsNotes on contributorsGeneral IntroductionIntroduction to Part ICHAPTER ONE. The Dialogue of Civilizations – a brief review
,
CHAPTER TWO. Is planetary civilization conceivable?
,
CHAPTER THREE. Intercultural thought, Bildung, and the onto- dialogical perspective
,
CHAPTER FOUR. Dialogue and epistemological humility
,
CHAPTER FIVE. Intercultural dialogue and the processing of significance: cognition as orientation
,
IntroductionCHAPTER SIX. Attachments and the moral psychology of value conflicts
,
CHAPTER SEVEN. Doing conflict research through a multimethod lens
,
CHAPTER EIGHT. How cultural contestation frames escalation and mitigation in ethnic conflict
,
CHAPTER NINE. Causing conflicts to continue
,
CHAPTER TEN. The human quest for peace, rights, and justice
,
IntroductionCHAPTER ELEVEN. The philosophy and politics of dialogue
,
CHAPTER TWELVE. Dialogue community as a promising path to global justice
,
CHAPTER THIRTEEN. How to make a world
,
CHAPTER FOURTEEN. Struggle for democracy and pluralism in the Islamic world
,
CHAPTER FIFTEEN. Religion and ideology
,
IntroductionCHAPTER SIXTEEN. Does the claim of absoluteness lead into interreligious conflicts?
,
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN. Certainty and diversity: a systematic approach to interreligious learning
,
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN. Back to the Future: Buber, Levinas and the original encounter
,
CHAPTER NINETEEN. Following two courses at the same time – on Chinese religious pluralism
,
CHAPTER TWENTY. Conflict and religion – secularity as a standard for authentic religion
,
IntroductionCHAPTER TWENTY-ONE. The ecology of languages and education in an intercultural perspective
,
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO. Translation as a lesson in dialogue
,
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE. Four meanings of climate change
,
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR. Standing on Mount Lu: how economics has come to dominate our view of culture and sustainability; and why it shouldn’t
,
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE. The Council for Research in Values and Philosophy: a brief review
,
Afterthought – The problem of the manyName indexSubject index.
DOI:
10.1515/9783110340785
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