Interreligious dialogue

  • Buddhists, Jesuits and the truth about taxi drivers

    Buddhist philosophy calls it conceptual proliferation. Catholic theology calls it a failure of reverence for the imago Dei. Fr. John Kerr Locke, a Jesuit who spent fifty years in Nepal, called it something simpler: a mistake. Reducing an entire culture to one bad afternoon with a taxi driver is, he insisted, just factually wrong.

    Buddhists, Jesuits and the truth about taxi drivers

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