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Relativism: Descriptive vs. Ethical Perspectives, Study notes of Ethics

EthicsAnthropologyCultural StudiesSociology

The concept of relativism, specifically focusing on descriptive and ethical perspectives. Descriptive relativism asserts that different cultures have distinct moral codes, while ethical relativism suggests that individuals ought to adhere to their society's moral code and that no moral code is inherently better than another. The document also discusses objections to ethical relativism and the limitations of tolerance.

What you will learn

  • How does the principle of tolerance apply to ethical relativism?
  • What is descriptive relativism and how does it differ from ethical relativism?
  • What are some objections to ethical relativism?

Typology: Study notes

2021/2022

Uploaded on 09/12/2022

kiras
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Download Relativism: Descriptive vs. Ethical Perspectives and more Study notes Ethics in PDF only on Docsity! Relativism—Descriptive and Normative -- A “moral code” consists in the beliefs (whether true or false, reasonable or unreasonable, humane or barbaric) about right/wrong, good/bad, just/unjust, virtuous/vicious that are actually held by the majority of people in a culture, tribe, social group, or society. Different cultures/social groups have had different moral codes. E.g. the moral code of ancient Egypt deemed incest among royalty to be okay, whereas our (contemporary America’s) moral code forbids it. -- Don’t confuse a moral code with the “objectively true” morality (assuming there is such a thing). Pat Robertson thinks that the true morality is Biblical, and using it, he would judge the moral code of contemporary America to be immoral, because most Americans seem to believe that sex between single, consenting men and women who are in love with each other is just fine, whereas Robertson condemns it as sinful—“fornication.” Certainly there have been many people in history who rejected the moral code of their own society as mistaken or immoral, either completely or in some parts. -- Using this notion of a “moral code,” we can now distinguish descriptive relativism from ethical (“normative”) relativism. Descriptive relativism—This is the view that different cultures have different moral codes. The moral codes of traditional Eskimos, of feudal Japanese, of modern Western Europeans, of ancient Greeks, of New Guinea headhunters, etc. differ in some fairly significant ways. The ancient Greeks thought infanticide was permissible, we don't. 18th century Hindu villagers in India supported the practice of suttee, while we condemn it. And so on. Descriptive relativism is a theory in anthropology, not ethics. It is not a theory in ethics because it is not an evaluative or normative view. It does not say, nor does it imply, anything about how anyone ought to behave. Ethical (or normative) relativism says three things: 1. Each of us ought to follow the moral code of his/her own society/culture. To act immorally = to violate the moral code of one’s society/culture. (This means that if I judge someone from another culture by my culture’s code, my moral judgment could very well be false). 2. The moral code of any culture/society is no better or worse, no more true or false, than the moral code of any other culture/society. There are no “objectively true,” universally valid moral principles that would allow us to rank the moral codes of different cultures against each other and say that some are more enlightened, humane, etc. than others. And because no such principles exist, it makes no sense to talk about “moral progress” within a single culture or civilization over time. 3. Everyone has a moral duty to “tolerate” the moral codes of other cultures/societies. This means not only that we should not try to force our moral beliefs on others (instead, we should practice “noninterventionism”), but that we shouldn’t judge the members of other cultures/societies by our code. If we do either of these, then we are doing something wrong. We are being ethnocentric. -- Descriptive relativism makes an "is" claim of anthropology, while ethical relativism makes an "ought" or "value" judgment in ethics. -- A popular argument for ethical relativism is as follows: 1. Different cultures have different moral beliefs; for example, some cultures hold that infanticide is permissible, while others hold that it is wrong.. (Descriptive relativism). 2. Therefore, there are no objectively binding, universally valid moral rules. Right and wrong are relative to one’s culture. (Ethical relativism). -- This argument commits the same fallacy as the argument for moral subjectivism that’s based on the premise that individuals disagree about what’s right and wrong. The fact that individuals or whole societies disagree about how to answer some question does not all by itself prove that the question has no single, correct answer. Some objections to ethical relativism: 1. It implies that there is no “objective” right or wrong not only as regards dietary and social matters that clearly are conventional (should we use forks or chopsticks? Should we show gratitude to the host by belching out loud or thanking him for the excellent dinner? etc.), but also as regards such practices as slavery, genocide, suttee, female genital mutilation, etc. 2. It implies that anyone who rejects his society’s moral code, including anyone who judges it backward and tries to reform it, is an immoral person. This is conservatism with a vengeance. It’s hard to believe that a Hindu woman whose husband has just died, but who resists being thrown into the funeral pyre with him, is an immoral person. Or that the slave in the ante-bellum South who tries to escape is an immoral person. Or that Jesus was immoral. 3. It is inconsistent. It denies that there are any “objective,” universally binding moral principles, then it claims that all cultures must observe a duty of “toleration.” 4. It misunderstands what the duty of “toleration” does and does not require. There are limits to what we have a duty to tolerate. We have a duty to tolerate those with a different religion, but not a duty to tolerate slavery, murder, child molestation, or other activities in which one person is violating the rights of others. We have a duty to condemn and in some circumstances to intervene and try to prevent rights violations.
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