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25 / Universality: From Theory to Practice
Sitter-Liver, Beat (ed.), Hiltbronner, Thomas (ass.)
An intercultural and interdisciplinary debate about facts, possibilities, lies and myths
2009 548 S.
Fr. 98.- / EUR 68.-
ISBN 978-3-7278-1650-5
Beat Sitter-Liver (ed.) / Thomas
Hiltbrunner (assist.)
Universality:
From Theory to Practice An intercultural
and interdisciplinary debate about facts, possibilities, lies and myths
Is universality of values, principles and
norms – e. g. human rights as declared by the United Nations in 1948 –
a concept that Western civilization alone recognizes? Or, if not, might
it be shared by other civilizations, perhaps throughout the world? Is
it or is it not an imperative we cannot avoid so long as we wish to secure
global, mutual understanding, peace and life-sustaining practices? What
about still imperialist nations and globally active enterprises who misuse
the concept? Do basic cultural differences definitely stand against the
project of a global ethic, as the Parliament of World Religions (1993)
claims? – These are some of the questions tackled in this book. Answers
are provided in the spirit of an interdisciplinary and intercultural debate
concerning facts, possibilities, lies and necessities to be found in the
ambiguous context of universal normative claims. The open, always critical,
yet benevolent discourse in this volume shows differences, even incompatibilities,
yet also common views and interests. It is part of the process that the
Declaration Toward a Global Ethic had in mind (1993), or what Samuel P.
Huntington had been pleading for when he maintained that, for «the relevant
future, there will be no universal civilization, but instead a world of
different civilizations, each of which will have to learn to coexist with
the others» (1993).
25. Kolloquium (2007) der Schweizerischen
Akademie der Geistes- und Sozialwissenschaften (SAGW 25)
548 Seiten, gebunden,
Fr. 98.– / EUR 68.–
ISBN 978-3-7278-1650-5