Bagir, Haidar2019-09-252019-09-252014-05-3120149782940428694http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/207689Defining the opposite of pluralism, i.e. fundamentalism and its various permutations, is a much more complex effort. People tend to mix into one category fundamentalism, Islamism, integrism, radicalism, sometimes even jihadism and terrorism. Here Veitch’s observation about the regretted situation with regards to pejorative nature of the use of the terms is very relevantPages:239-244engCreative Commons Copyright (CC 2.5)JihadiTerrorismProblemGlobal ethicsPolitical ethicsEconomic ethicsCultural ethicsReligious ethicsMethods of ethicsBioethicsCommunity ethicsEnvironmental ethicsReligious-linked violence and terrorism : a response to James VeitchBook chapter