We live in a pluralistic age, and it demands a new pragmatism.
Hence his personal or pluralistic idealism is the view that the world is a plurality of many coexisting and interacting centres of experience, while will is the most fundamental form of experience.'
The doctrine here developed is the first cardinal point of Herbart's system, and has obtained for it the name of "pluralistic realism."
Along with a social image of thinking, a quilting bee suggests a pluralistic, multicultural view concerning the thinkers themselves.
Are we tempted to soft pedal the uniqueness of Christ in our politically correct and supposedly pluralistic society?