Not exact matches
And one of the marks of a healthy conscience is an awareness of one's own
limitations, a desire to test one's beliefs
in a larger arena, to draw from the best that a
religious tradition has to offer, to feel that one is not isolated and alone
in the face of great moral perplexities.
What «further can be said,» however — i.e., whether the Principle of
Limitation should be conceived as «Allah, Brahman, Yahweh or Father
in Heaven» — is left to be decided on the basis of particular experiences of the different
religious traditions.
One of the marks of a healthy conscience is an awareness of one's own
limitations, a desire to test one's beliefs
in a larger arena, to draw from the best that a
religious tradition has to offer, to feel that one is not isolated and alone
in the face of great moral perplexities.
My point
in the above is simply to note a
limitation in the forms of openness that characterize the Indian
religious traditions.