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Document Details :

Title: Complementary Reasoning and Interreligious Dialogue
Subtitle: A Case Study in Interdisciplinary Reflection
Author(s): SYDNOR, Jon Paul
Journal: Studies in Interreligious Dialogue
Volume: 15    Issue: 2   Date: 2005   
Pages: 165-181
DOI: 10.2143/SID.15.2.2004103

Abstract :
Although some theorists have explored interreligious cognition, few theorists have applied Niels Bohr’s strong complementarity reasoning to an interreligious conversation in order to determine its promise. This essay investigates the potential of strong complementarity reasoning as a religious mode of cognition suitable for interreligious dialogue. It does not seek to advance complementarity reasoning as such but simply to determine its interreligious promise. And in fact, this essay suggests that strong complementarity reasoning has but a mitigated role to play in interreligious dialogue, more as a stimulant and validator than as a religious mode of cognition. This essay will conclude that interreligious dialogue is better served by traditionally religious modes of cognition, such as paradox, than by modes of cognition borrowed from the physical sciences.

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