Appalachian State University
Browse

Teaching Comparative Religious Ethics - A Review Essay

Download (146.79 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-08-08, 16:54 authored by Kevin Schilbrack
Though others have surveyed the different methods in comparative religious ethics, relatively little attention has been given to different approaches to pedagogy (exceptions include Lovin and Reynolds; Juergens-meyer; Twiss). The field of comparative religious ethics has now reached a level of maturity so that there are a variety of ways such courses can be taught. In this review I consider the approaches to comparative religious ethics found in four recent texts by Jacob Neusner, Darrell Fasching and Dell deChant, Regina Wolfe and Christine Gudorf, and Sumner Twiss and Bruce Grelle. In the essay I note the strengths and weaknesses of each text, with special attention given to how the texts might work in the classroom. I then argue that the different texts reflect different understandings of the goal of teaching comparative religious ethics, and I make these goals explicit in order to help teachers decide how they might approach the teaching in this growing field.

History

Related Materials

AI-Assisted

  • No

Year Created

2002

College or School

  • College of Arts and Sciences

Department

Philosophy and Religion

Language

English

Access Rights

  • Open

Content Genre or Classification

Review

Usage metrics

    Research, Scholarly, & Creative Outputs

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC