Relativism
Essay by review • November 15, 2010 • Essay • 782 Words (4 Pages) • 1,099 Views
Standards of right and wrong are the mere products of time and culture. Morality is a neutral concept - there is no such thing as an absolute right or wrong. Instead, morality is defined by what is 'good' or 'bad' in a given society, by the social norms. What held true twenty thousand, two thousand, or even two hundred years ago may or may not hold true now. The human race has grown and continues to expand; our technology, culture, customs, and laws constantly change and evolve.
Perception is reality. What one believes to be right or wrong could be completely different from what someone else believes. I believe that abortion is a much-needed aspect of society. You might disagree completely. Which position is morally correct? Everything you believe, you believe because you were taught in some way shape or form. Is it wrong to kill? "Of course", a modern American citizen would respond. Ask this to a member of the ancient Yanomamo tribe and they would not only disagree, but they would find it to be a common and accepted act among their people. Upon an Emperor's death, Samurai would take the lives of their willing friends as a sign of honor and respect. It is hard to judge exactly what good and bad are, because their definitions change as time goes by. Morals will never stop evolving, so something that may be "good" or ethical by today's standards, may be "evil" in the future. The greatest good is in the eye of the beholder.
Relativism does not allow for the existence of an absolute set of ethics, many people do not seriously consider it. Subtlety, it denies the existence of a Divine Ethics Giver (a.k.a. a God). The Christian Bible itself is just a hair under two thousand years old. God's will, the 10 commandments, etc, would not hold sway in the argument of relativism. "Thou shall not kill". Sound familiar? Well, that is a poor translation of what the Bible truly states. In Ancient Hebrew this translates (verbatim) into "thou shall not murder". But think about this for a moment. What is the definition of murder? If God didn't define it, doesn't that mean it is left up to the society? In Webster's Dictionary, it is listed as, "the unlawful killing of one person by another, especially with a premeditated malice". Since the laws now are obviously different than the laws two thousand years ago, this statement would be relative to the time and place in which the murder took place. The current legal definition of murder is "the unlawful killing of a human being, or a fetus, with malice aforethought".
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