Words matter. These are the best Pluralistic Quotes from famous people such as Aga Khan IV, Howard Gardner, Tariq Ramadan, Tulsi Gabbard, Frances Hesselbein, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
A secure pluralistic society requires communities that are educated and confident both in the identity and depth of their own traditions and in those of their neighbours.
When we teach in pluralistic ways, there are two wonderful dividends. First of all, we reach more students, because some learn best through stories, some through works of art, some through role play etc. Second of all, we show what it is like really to understand something.
Terror will crash down on us if we fail to understand that a pluralistic society requires the personal and daily commitment of every citizen.
People in the Middle East, people everywhere, want peace. But unfortunately too many fail to recognize that that lasting peace can only be found with pluralistic, secular government.
We are increasingly becoming a pluralistic nation.
Our world is increasingly interdependent and pluralistic, and in order to ensure a civil future, we must get to know one another.
Even the state TV channels are not monolithic in their pro-government line, and the views they express are quite pluralistic.
India is a vibrant nation whose strength lies in its commitment to equal rights and to speech, religious and economic freedoms that enrich the lives of all citizens. India is not only the world’s largest democracy; it is also a secular, pluralistic society committed to inclusive growth.
In other words, the bar should be maintained at the level of a pluralistic and participatory democracy.
Liberals subscribe to the new flexible, pluralistic definition of the family; their defense of families carries no conviction.
Democrats should insist that a pluralistic democracy such as ours rely on bipartisanship in formulating a foreign policy based on moderation and the nuances of the human condition.
Religiously the Empire was pluralistic and marked by a search for a faith which would be satisfying intellectually and ethically and would give assurance of immortality.
What should be targeted is a concept of organic, and not just mechanic, democracy that preserves the rule of law, separation of powers, and that is participatory and pluralistic.
Many of us, both Jews and Christians, want the public square to be pluralistic, which is neither partisan nor naked.
We are a pluralistic Nation composed of very distinct groups, each bound together by ethnicity, race, or religion – each group proud of its identity and committed to its faith and traditions. Yet despite these differences, we can be bound together into a broader community.
We have to find a way to try and reconcile our beliefs – and Islam, like Judaism and Christianity, has traditionally seen homosexuality as a sin – with the reality of life in modern, pluralistic, secular societies in which gay people cannot be wished away or banished from sight.
Democracy is made up of three elements. One is whether the laws support pluralistic principles. The second is whether the people take advantage of these laws. The third element is whether the peoples’ wallets are thick enough to benefit from this democracy.
We are a people of many different religions and many different faiths. The only way forward in a pluralistic society of diverse faiths such as ours is to have laws that protect and respect the freedom of all, equally.
The emphasis on the birth of Christ tends to polarize our pluralistic society and create legal and ethnic belligerence.
Bahaism gives you a pluralistic view, and a lot of aspects of Hinduism give you a moral framework with no accountability other than the karmic system. There’s no linear movement or point of accountability toward God.