The approach that is aimed at finding common ground between world religions and cultural traditions is religious pluralism (b), also known as religious diversity. This attitude respects people's rights to call themselves Christians, or Jews, or Muslims, or Buddhists, or atheists, and believes in, recognizes, and promotes the peaceful (because plurality inevitably implies differing, divergent, and conflicting views) interaction and cooperation among individuals and groups of different religious traditions and confessions, and among those that do not believe.