Must there just be one road to truth? Can’t there be multiple valid views of the world? Who is to say that just one view is right and all others are wrong? Don’t most religions teach basically the same thing, only disagreeing on particulars related to cultural differences? Is it possible for many worldviews to live in peace with one another? Can’t we all just coexist? John Stonestreet explores many of these questions in his discussion of this very modern perspective: Pluralism.
plu·ral·ism n. a. The doctrine that reality is composed of many ultimate substances. b. The belief that no single explanatory system or view of reality can account for all the phenomena of life.