Cultural Relativism Essay

730 Words2 Pages

Introduction Relativism is quickly dominating the cultural landscape of America, as proponents propagate messages of open-mindedness, social and religious tolerance, situational ethics, and the nonexistence of objective truth. Although relativism receives universal application throughout every facet of the human experience, the philosophy becomes especially significant when addressing moral concerns, such as abortion, dying with dignity, etc. While the concept of relativism appears superficially progressive, promising to eradicate discrimination and innumerable social barriers, the philosophy proves irrational under scrutiny. This brief essay will demonstrate the absurdity of moral relativism, while confirming the existence of objective morals. …show more content…

Unfortunately, tolerance is not a requirement within the framework of subjective morality, and its avocation is inconsistent with relativism itself. In fact, to require tolerance is a fundamentally intolerant act, projecting an obvious prejudice against the person whose subjective moral framework allows for vocalized bigotry. Philosopher Lewis Vaughn highlights this contradiction, commenting, “To advocate tolerance is to advocate an objective moral value. But if tolerance is an objective moral value, then cultural relativism must be false, because it says that there are no objective moral values.” Therefore, relativism—and by extension, the notion of subjective morality—is inherently contradictory, thus proving completely irrational under …show more content…

While their actions differed significantly, neither was operating outside of their subject moral framework, and none of their actions are objectively right, or objectively wrong. Morality becomes nothing more than a matter of preference. Hitler prefers genocide, Mother Teresa does not; neither is right, it is just a difference of opinion. Consistently, living under the structure of subjective morality results in chaos, where might makes right, and the loser has not basis to object. If Hitler has the power to impose his morality on others, there is no objective reason to complain, and no basis to assert he is wrong in doing so. If a man can overpower a woman and rape her, no crime is committed; he is simply exercising his personal moral

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