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Ethical Relativism Adam Moore I. Ethical Relativism — holds that moral principles are chosen by groups or cultures. The moral rightness or wrongness of acts is dependent on the society/culture/region that you are a part of. Moreover, there are no non-relativized moral standards that are correct, –i.e. there are no moral standards that hold across all societies. II. Cultural Relativism — is descriptive, it describes human behavior (it does not prescribe action). – different societies have different beliefs and moral principles –they have different customs –they have different mores - kinds of behavior considered improper –e.g. covering feet or head –they also have different moral beliefs and moral codes/principles. E.G. Baffin Island - Innuit Eskimos -when a person gets so old that they cannot produce their share they are left in a remote spot to die of exposure. 1. Note: Ethical relativism goes beyond CR and claims that each of these different moral principles/codes is equally correct. Diplomatic Immunity Laws are based on this reasoning. Why think that our moral codes are the only correct ones - different people have be raised differently and we cannot judge them or their moral codes/standards. Nuremberg trials 1946 - the defense argued that Nazi's could not be held to moral codes outside their culture. The defense did not work - crimes against humanity were said to hold across all cultures. III. The Argument For Ethical Relativism: 1. Diversity Thesis: Moral rightness and wrongness of actions vary from society to society, so there are no universal moral standards held by all societies (CR). 2. Dependency Thesis: Whether or not it is right for individuals to act in a certain way depends on (or is relative to) the society to which they belong. 3. Therefore, there are no absolute or objective moral standards that apply to all people everywhere. The ethical relativist goes beyond cultural relativism and claims that each of the different moral principles found in different cultures are equally correct. It is not merely that different societies have different moral codes and principles, but that each of these moral principles are just as correct as any other. IV. Subjectivism (Radical Individualized Ethical Relativism): Since it is possible for moral principles to be relativized to individuals we must consider this kind of relativism. Here morality is "in the eye of the beholder." What is right, just, fair, and good for one individual might be wrong, unjust, unfair, and evil for another. More importantly, each of the different moral principles that different individuals affirm are equally correct. A. Problem: Morality becomes a useless concept — little or no interpersonal criticism or judgment is logically possible. You cannot condemn Ted Bundy for killing others for fun because he is following a correct moral principle. One that is just as correct as "Don't kill innocent people if you can help it." Bundy and Hitler become just as moral as Gandhi — each were following their own correct moral principles. V. Relativism and Tolerance: Perhaps the primary motivation most non-philosophers have for accepting relativism is based on a perceived connection between relativism and tolerance. (Some philosophers are relativists, but I know of none that offer this as a reason.) There is, indeed, a connection between relativism and tolerance—but it is not at all the one that relativists think is there. A. The putative (assumed) connection: -- the ethical relativist thinks that ER ‘buys’ toleration. . .if ER is true how can we morally condemn others? Singer B. The confusion: Can ER actually provide a defense of moral toleration? If a given society has no aversion to intolerance toward the practices of others, then the relativist cannot claim that there is anything (objectively) wrong with their intolerance. “If God Had Wanted Me To Be Accepting Of Gays, He Would Have Given Me The Warmth And Compassion To Do So. . . Compassion, tolerance, understanding, basic decency, the ability to put myself in another person's position: God could have endowed me with any of those traits and yet—here is the crucial part—He didn't. It's a simple matter of logic, really. God made me who I am, and who I am is a cold, anti-gay zealot. Thus, I abhor gay people because God made me that way. Why is that so hard to understand?” The Onion God • Issue 45•42 • Oct 13, 2009 John Stuart Mill’s On Liberty . . . based on an absolutist moral theory, utilitarianism. . .provides a defense of moral toleration. Patrick Devlin’s The Enforcement of Morality, which argues for legal sanctions against prostitution and homosexuality, is based on a version of moral relativism. Devlin believes that morality is just a matter of shared, strongly held attitudes, and, so, the fact that our culture strongly opposes these actions just is a moral condemnation of them. C. Avoiding the confusion: To avoid the confusion one must be very clear about at least the two following distinctions. a. The moral evaluation of an action and the moral evaluation of interference with that action: It is quite possible for an action to be morally wrong but for it to also be wrong to interfere with others' performance of that action. Perhaps, it might even be wrong to publicly condemn an action that it is wrong to perform. b. The moral evaluation of an action and the moral evaluation of the agent who performs it: Even good people do bad things often because they have false beliefs, don't understand the nature or consequences of their actions, or don't have the intellectual character that allows them to abstract from current practices and reflect on them. Because of this, it may well be incorrect to judge a person as morally deficient even if he performs an action that is morally atrocious. V. Problems: ER + CR On this view moral principles are conventions that are adopted by different societies and cultures. Once again, the claim is that different moral principles found in different cultures are equally correct. A. Problems for the Diversity Thesis: ER includes CR and maybe CR is not true in its claims about moral codes/principles. Maybe the differences we see in different societies are differences in factual belief, but not in moral codes. e.g. Eskimos | Honor your parents. | die of exposure Canada | Honor your parents. | old folks home The moral principle is the same for both cultures, the difference is in what is the best way to honor your parents. B. Problems for the Dependency Thesis: 1. We know of many cases where different groups of people have different beliefs about the same subject. But, we would never conclude that these beliefs are equally correct. e.g. the shape of the earth. Why think an argument like this is any better in ethics? http://theflatearthsociety.org/cms/ 2. Suppose that some culture is asked to justify (give arguments) for some moral principle. If they can give such an argument then they will have refuted ER, because arguments are universal. E.g. if I can give a sound argument that shows that it is wrong to kill innocent people in a certain range of case, then this principle will hold across these cases independent of time, culture, or religion. If would seem that justification/arguments destroys ER. If there is no good justification for some moral principle, then why think that following it is right, just, fair, and good? 3. Ethical Relativism leads to absurd conclusions. Suppose that we found a lost island in the South Pacific that held the following moral rules. Cause pain and suffering to as many people as possible. Kill any child that looks an adult in the eyes. Torture women for fun on the first day of the month. Burn at the stake any woman or child who disobeys a command. The ethical relativist must say that this set of moral rules is just as correct as our rules that prohibit these activities. In fact if Jones, a member of this island, fails to follow one of these rules the ethical relativist must say that he is immoral. 4. ER can’t explain “moral progress” 5. ER can’t provide a solid foundation for toleration. 6. How do we define the group to which ethics is relativized? Americans, hockey players, ?? Conclusion: It is generally thought that 1 – 6 provide a conclusive case against ER.