Diana L. Eck (born 1945) is a scholar of religious studies who is Professor of Comparative Religion and Indian Studies at Harvard University, as well as a former faculty dean of Lowell House and the Director of The Pluralism Project at Harvard. Among other works, she is the author of Banaras, City of Light, Darshan: Seeing the Divine Image in India, Encountering God: A Spiritual Journey from Bozeman to Banaras, A New Religious America: How a Christian Country Became the World's Most Religiously Diverse Nation, and "India: A Sacred Geography." At Harvard, she is in the Department of South Asian Studies, the Committee on the Study of Religion, and is also a member of the Faculty of Divinity. She has been the chair for the Committee on the Study of Religion. She also served on the Humanities jury for the Infosys Prize in 2019.[1]
Eck's mother, Dorothy Eck, was a Montana State Senator for twenty years, president of the Montana League of Women Voters, and a delegate to Montana's 1972 Constitutional Convention.[2] Eck's father, Hugo Eck, was an architect and Professor of Architecture at Montana State University.
Since 1991, Diana Eck has also turned her attention to the United States and has been heading a research team at Harvard University to explore the new religious diversity of the United States and its meaning for the American pluralist experiment. The Pluralism Project has developed an affiliation with many other colleges and universities across the country and around the world. In 1994, Diana Eck and the Pluralism Project published "World Religions in Boston, A Guide to Communities and Resources" which introduces the many religious traditions and communities in Boston, Massachusetts - from Native Americans, Christians, Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, Hindus, Sikhs, Jains, to Zoroastrians. In 1997, Diana Eck and the Pluralism Project published an educational multimedia CD Rom, On Common Ground: World Religions in America (Columbia University Press). This CD Rom received awards from Media & Methods, EdPress, and Educom. These resources are now online at www.pluralism.org.
Eck is married to the Reverend Dorothy Austin. The two were married on July 4, 2004, after 28 years of partnership.[5]
Concept of pluralism
Pluralism is not diversity alone, but the energetic engagement with diversity. Diversity can and has meant the creation of religious ghettoes with little between or among them. Today, religious diversity is a given, but pluralism is not a given; it is an achievement.
Eck's interest in other religions combined with her own 'Christian pluralist'[7] faith led her to develop her concept of pluralism. Pluralism, for Eck, is the best response to the challenges of religious diversity. The term pluralism has been understood in numerous ways but Eck is clear to distinguish between pluralism and plurality[8]—two words which are often used interchangeably and without distinction. Whilst plurality is the fact of diversity, pluralism is a response to that diversity—and in Eck's account, it is an active, positive response.
Eck lays out three prevalent responses to religious diversity: exclusivism, inclusivism and pluralism.[9] An exclusivist approach takes the position that "my way is the only way". An inclusivist might consider that there are grains of truth in other ways, but ultimately understands that "my way is the better way". In contrast, a pluralist response seeks to find new ways of positively engaging with diversity, exploring differences whilst seeking common understanding. On the website for Harvard University's Pluralism Project, Eck describes the four principles of pluralism:[10]
Pluralism is not diversity alone, but the energetic engagement with diversity
Pluralism is not tolerance, but the active seeking of understanding across lines of difference
Pluralism is not relativism, but the encounter of commitments
Pluralism is based on dialogue.
Eck's concept of pluralism has been influential within the wider interfaith movement, and is cited by the Interfaith Youth Core as foundational to its organisational values.[11]
She is the founder of The Pluralism Project which supports the study of pluralism in urban areas of the United States, including the application of Noahidism in the United States.[12]
First LGBT master at Harvard
In 1998, Eck and Dorothy Austin became the first same-sex couple to be masters (now called faculty deans) of Lowell House,[13] one of the twelve undergraduate residences at Harvard.
In 1996, Prof. Eck was appointed to a U.S. State Department Advisory Committee on Religious Freedom Abroad, a twenty-member commission charged with advising the Secretary of State on enhancing and protecting religious freedom in the overall context of human rights.
Eck, Diana L. (1986). Jain, Devaki (ed.). Speaking of faith: cross-cultural perspectives on women, religion, and social change. London: Women's Press. ISBN9780704340169.
Eck, Diana L. (1987). The manyness of God. Canton, New York: St. Lawrence University. OCLC25126361. (Kathryn Fraser Mackay lecture, 1985: 16 pages)
Eck, Diana L.; Mallison, Françoise (1991). Devotion divine: Bhakti traditions from the regions of India: studies in honour of Charlotte Vaudeville. Groningen, Netherlands: Egbert Forsten Publishing. ISBN9789069800455.
Eck, Diana L. (2003). Encountering God: a spiritual journey from Bozeman to Banaras (2nd ed.). Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN9780807073018.
Won the Unitarian Universalist Melcher Award (1994) and the Grawemeyer Book Award (1995).
Eck, Diana L. (2002). On common ground world religions in america (2nd ed.). New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN9780231126649. Multimedia presentation on CD ROM.
^ Seiple, Chris; Hoover, Dennis (28 December 2021). The Routledge Handbook of Religious Literacy, Pluralism, and Global Engagement. Routledge/Taylor & Francis. p. 9. ISBN978-0367-47802-5.