L30 Phil 131F Lecture Notes - Lecture 2: Cultural Relativism, Gensler, Relativism

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What about the cases of racism, women"s rights, etc. If morality is determined by majority vote, there"s no basis for disagreement. Ethical objectivism: some issues are right and wrong independent of what people think. Objections to ethical objectivism: moral disagreement a. Cultural relativism: the view that social approval is the ultimate measure of morality. Acts approved by society are good, acts that are not are bad. Ethical relativism: an action is morally wrong (or right) for a person if and only if that person"s culture believes it is wrong (or right) Believes infanticide is wrong, that her society disapproves of it, but for romans it was ok. Uses examples such as slavery, massacring the native americans, japanese internment camps and asks if morals change and how this would affect cultural relativism. People judge other cultures from their own point of view. It does not allow for disagreement within society a.

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