Transcript Relativism
What’s wrong with
relativism?
Michael Lacewing
Descriptive relativism
Moral codes differ from one society to the
next:
Some believe slavery is permissible, some don’t.
Some enforce female circumcision, some don’t
Some hold that everyone should be treated as
equals, some don’t
This is a factual claim.
Moral relativism
There is no objective moral standard
independent of what societies endorse.
There is no objective moral truth for all people at
all times.
‘Morally right’ = ‘right according to (some)
society’s moral code’
So we can’t say that a society’s moral values or
practices are objectively right/wrong.
Relativism and
subjectivism
Relativism analyses morality as essentially
socially.
Relativism is not subjectivism.
Subjectivism makes morality ‘relative’ to each
individual person.
According to relativism, society determines there is a
right answer for individuals within that society.
From descriptive to moral
relativism
Descriptive relativism doesn’t imply
normative relativism.
Disagreement is not enough to abandon truth
Societies could make mistakes.
Societies are not trying to get at the ‘ethical
truth’; instead ethical values and practices are
part of a way of living.
Scientific v. ethical ‘truth’
Science: discovers how the one, physical world is
Ethics: there are many social worlds with
different conventions, not one world which
guides us towards agreement.
What would explain ethical ‘mistakes’ or getting
the correct answer?
Tolerance
Relativism does not imply tolerance.
Incoherence:
1) there are no objective moral truths, so
2) you ought to respect other moralities
But (2) states what is supposed to be an objective
moral truth!
What if my society’s moral code recommends
intolerance?
Tolerance
Why should I be tolerant? Why should I respect other
people’s views?
Are the answers reasons for everyone to be tolerant?
Then there are these universal moral truths: it is right to
respect others, it is right to be tolerant
Believing that there are universal moral truths does not
mean forcing these views on others.
Especially if one of the universal moral truths I believe is
that tolerance is good!
Of course, I may try to persuade you that I am right – but
what is wrong with rational argument?
Moral authority
Does relativism entail that ‘anything goes’?
If the ‘authority’ of morality is society, why should
we be concerned with what society thinks?
This is different from the question: why are we
concerned with what society thinks?
Perhaps we should be tolerant. But this has limits –
should we tolerate everything?
Can we meaningfully condemn the practices of other
societies?
Condemnation and
improvement
Some moral views rest on errors of fact.
Three justifications for female genital mutilation:
If you don’t remove a girl’s clitoris, it will continue to grow
If a man’s penis touches a clitoris, this will kill him
‘Unnatural stimulation’ of a clitoris causes epilepsy and
other mental illnesses
Slaves (whoever, wherever!) have lower IQs.
Condemnation and
improvement
There can be objective improvements in
rationality
Becoming more consistent (applying principles more
broadly)
Suppose it were true that slaves have lower IQs – should all
people who have lower IQs be enslaved?
Treatment of animals (pets v. laboratory experiments v.
food)
Becoming more coherent (resolving tensions between
principles)
Descriptive relativism and
human nature
Different societies share many general principles and
virtues
E.g. prohibitions on killing, lying, theft
Endorse care of the weak and courage
Different ethical practices reflect different conditions, not
different principles
Aristotle: we all aim to achieve the best life
We all live in some society, and will need similar virtues for this
Some societies endorse traits that don’t help people flourish
Relativism and human
nature
Reply: There is no one ‘best’ life for people – the idea is
culturally relative.
Not all societies believe everyone is equal, so don’t agree
that everyone should be assisted to achieve the best life.
But are we confident enough to defend a universal
framework within which there are a variety of acceptable
answers?