Arguments Against Ethical Relativism

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The strongest argument against ethical relativism is that if you accept the idea of it, you must accept that the minority of a culture believing in an idea is morally wrong, and the majority is right. Benedict’s theory states that anything can be normal or abnormal in a culture. Whatever is considered abnormal is ethically wrong and vice versa. There are big problems with this theory. According to this, people who fought for civil rights and women’s suffrage were “wrong” just because they were in the minority at the time. Then once their support for their beliefs grew past 50%, they were now morally right. This also applies to people who believed in slavery or concentration camps. If they were in the majority of their culture, it makes them …show more content…

A lot of people would disagree with this statement and say that there is no way that what Adolf Hitler did could ever be right. It is because of this that cultural relativism could not be widely accepted as a form of ethics while based on the idea that anything could be right or wrong. Another hole in this theory is when she references a group of natives called the “Kwakiutl”(Benedict 1). In Benedict’s defense of relativism, she states, “Among the Kwakiutl it did not matter whether a relative had died in a bed of disease, or by the hand of an enemy, in either case death was an affront to he wiped out by the death of another person.” These people sought revenge for death of one of their family members by killing someone else in the tribe who was unrelated to their death. The cycle would continue with the next member killing someone else and so on. This is one of many situations that could never be normal in a culture because eventually as this played out, there would be nobody left alive to carry on the culture. There are some things that are just intrinsically bad (killing and lying) to the point that no culture could exist with them being considered as good

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