Alvarez, Daniel R. "Rupp in Perspective: An Examination of Two Topics in Beyond Existentialism and Zen." Philosophy East & West 55, no. 2 (April 2005): 153-178.
Abstract
George Rupp's Beyond
Existentialism and Zen, in
its typological-structural analysis and model of religious pluralism,
proffers an alternative to the dominant Kantian models (e.g., by John
Hicks and Sarvepalli Radhakrish nan). The question for Rupp is not
which religion is true and how to decide that issueanswered in the
Kantian approach in terms of an unknowable Ding an sich that all
religions, albeit imperfectly, try to approximate or conceptualize
(i.e., God or the Transcendent)but rather how do religions represent,
at least in principle, a structural possibility for salvation or human
flourishing, however different and incompatible their distinct prima
facie truth claims might be. Although the potential for a radically
relativistic model is implicit in Rupp's approach, it is argued here
that his Hegelian assumptions lead him to accept relativism only in a
provisional ("critical") way; for Rupp, under ideal epistemic
conditions (e.g., the Peircian "end of inquiry"), one final
conceptualization of ultimate reality will emerge as absolute truth. In
the final part of this essay a version of the relativistic model
implicit in Rupp's approach is defended against both the Kantian model
of Hicks et al. and Rupp's Hegelian-Peircian model, which, it is
argued, is incompatible certainly with the spirit of his own
typological-structural analysis, if not with the letter. In challenging
what Rupp calls the truth of Zen, it is further argued that not only is
more than one salvific structural possibility available to us through
the different world religions but also that realizing these
possibilities is principally a human responsibility, and that the
cosmos is quite indifferent to and compatible with several
possibilities, from the most destructive to the most conducive to human
well being and flourishing.