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Bumper Sticker Ethics S Wilkens

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Title: Bumper Sticker Ethics S Wilkens


1
Bumper Sticker Ethics S Wilkens
  • Cultural relativism when in Rome do as a Romans
    do
  •  
  • From one culture to another, and from one of
    time to another within the same culture, there is
    diversity on what is considered right and wrong
  • Greece BC 220 slavery is OK
  • Greece A D 2000 slavery is not OK
  •  
  • Papua New Guinea Cannibalism is okay in some
    tribes
  • Great Britain YUK!!!!
  •  
  • C.R Is a form of ethical relativism. The belief
    that there is no moral truth that applies to all
    peoples at all times. There are no absolute moral
    standards for moral judgement.
  •  

2
  •  Cultural relativism is a recent form of ethical
    relativism.
  •  
  • C.R. It is not each person, but each person's
    culture that is the standard by which actions are
    to be measured.
  • Cultural relativism States
  • No ethical system is better than any other. So,
    in Rome, do as the Romans do.
  • Why do as a Roman? Societies need structure to
    survive. This includes ethical standards. So,
    follow the norms of the culture in which you
    live!
  •  Cultural relativism looks at what is common
    practice with in a society. This is what should
    guide our actions.
  • Laws and rules these provide stability and order
    in life. But they are relative to be given
    culture.

3
  • Cultural relativism abortion?
  • Abortion may be wrong in one society but
    abortion may be okay in another
  •  
  • Moral Standards vary from side society to society
    i.e. boiling lobsters, drinking animal blood.
  • Can you give good examples?
  • Female circumcision?!!!!!
  •  
  • Cultural relativism states that we should not
    impose our Standards on outsiders. Our feelings
    to acts like infanticide do not originate from
    knowledge of an absolute moral measure.
  • Our feelings on infanticide are simply a
    reflection of our culture.

4
Positives of cultural relativism
  • It promotes Tolerance.
  • It recognises differences but does not judge them
    by some measure outside the culture in question.
  • There are no absolute truths as regards morality.
    Cultural relativism promotes intercultural
    tolerance
  • Live and Let Live attitude.
  •  

5
  • Cultural relativism reminds us that our way and
    what is familiar cannot be assumed to be the
    right and only way.

I am very angry. It must be my way!
6
  • Cultural relativism warns us to be careful not to
    load-down Christianity with so much of our
    cultural baggage that someone from another
    culture is forced to accept Our social values
    along with the Gospel, the key message of
    Christianity.
  • Social values dressed music architecture etc are
  •  
  • When you proclaim the Gospel
  • Love one another.
  • You must wear a Kilt like me!

7
 Potential Problems
  • Who gets to be God?
  •  
  • C.R is built upon the belief
  • Truth is always relative to a non- absolute
    standard ones own culture.
  •  
  • Where does this leave God? Relativism seems to
    put ones culture in the place of God.
  •  
  • God 10 Commandments
  •  
  • Our own cultural values

8
  • Even if you believe in God, if you follow
    Cultural relativist thinking you arrive at
    denying that we can know up the what God's moral
    will for all people is.
  •  
  • There is No absolute universal standard
  • Our understanding of Gods universal will is
    shoved to the sidelines.
  • A. Yet Christianity regards moral truths as Trans
    cultural - across cultures.
  • Matt 28 19 ..go and to all nations.
  • B. Relativism argues that what a culture does is
    right because it considers it right.
  • The book of Amos condemns practices of nations
    who are neighbours to Israel. God holds these
    neighbouring, Gentile peoples, to standards that
    transcend their culturally accepted ideas.
  • God has no ethical relevance in C.R.

9
  •  Do moral principles vary?
  •  The cornerstone of C.R
  • Ethical norms differ from one culture
  • to another culture.
  •  
  • Is actually true? There is good reason to doubt
    that there is in fact Cultural disagreement on
    ethical principles
  • A tribe can believe in principles like you shall
    not steal. At the same time it may encourage
    stealing from outsiders for survival or on
    grounds that outsiders are perceived as less than
    human.
  •  
  • The counter Argument here is
  • All cultures embrace certain basic moral
    principles.

10
Be careful this point usually confuses!!!!
  • Is C.R self contradictory, incoherent?
  • A problem arises from two foundation stones
  • There is no absolute truth
  • Intolerance is wrong
  • In practice these tends to lead to
  • Tolerant intolerance!
  • Absolute relativism!
  • Example
  • A culture has an intolerant world view!
  • Culture relativism We must be a tolerant of all
    the standards of cultures.
  •  
  • 3. Cultural relativism But intolerance is
    wrong!
  •  
  • 4. Self contradiction affirms two mutually
    exclusive things at the same time!

11
  •  Is moral improvement possible?
  •  
  • The concept of Change presents serious problems
    for relativism
  •  
  • If truth and rightness are relative to cultures
    then what is the motivation to change.
  • How do we evaluate change when it has occurred?
  •  
  • In a slave culture a relativist cannot argue or
    moral grounds that slavery should be abolished.
    To do so would require appeal to some standard
    other than the existing social mores, which allow
    slavery.
  •  
  • Since relativism accepts that what the society
    believes at the time is better, there can be no
    possible reason ever offered for the rightness of
    changing slavery. In any event why change
    slavery?
  •  
  • No one set of ethics is better than another.
  • In addition if this is true, even if we do move
    from slavery to none slavery, we cannot call it
    progress. No single practice his superior to
    another.

12
  • Is tolerance always good? C.R. promote tolerance
  •  
  • But what basis do you have for calling on
    countries to stop things like racism and,
    torture, genocide, child labour.
  • Such an appeal would be intolerant, even
    arrogant. No truth is more true than that of the
    truth in cultures we would criticise.
  •  
  • So we cannot appeal to human rights!!! There are
    no absolutes
  •  
  • P. 42 at the core of our discomfort is the
    relativists belief that whoever controls the
    culture is the final judge of truth. This can be
    frightening even in a democratic society when
    rules are decided by majority, because Most
    believe that it is possible for the majority to
    be wrong.
  • What of a tyrannical minority?

13
Conclusion
  • Relativism Offers no frontal assault and
    Christianity.
  •  
  • But it undermines Christianity!
  • Instead of attacking, it trivialises. Instead
    of rejecting Christianity as false, it grants it
    relative truth. The faith is true for Christians
    but not necessarily from anyone else.
  •  
  •  
  • Relativism changes the word truth
  • TRUTH equals comfortable to fact or reality
  • becomes what a given culture believes to be
    true.
  •  
  • It seems counter-intuitive to believe that no
    basis exists for judging certain practices
    better or worse than any other practices and
    that people should tolerate any practice accepted
    in a given society.  
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