by Eric Schwitzgebel
Cultural moral relativism is the view that what is morally right and wrong varies between cultures. According to
normative cultural moral relativism, what varies between cultures is what
really is morally right and wrong (e.g., in some cultures, slavery is genuinely permissible, in other cultures it isn't). According to
descriptive cultural moral relativism, what varies is what people in different cultures
think is right and wrong (e.g., in some cultures people think slavery is fine, in others they don't; but the position is neutral on whether slavery really
is fine in the cultures that think it is).
A strong version of descriptive cultural moral relativism holds that cultures vary radically in what they regard as morally right and wrong.
A case can be made for strong descriptive cultural moral relativism. Some cultures appear to regard aggressive warfare and genocide as among the highest moral accomplishments (consider the book of Joshua in the Old Testament); others (ours) think aggressive warfare and genocide are possibly the greatest moral wrongs of all. Some cultures celebrate slavery and revenge killing; others reject those things. Some cultures think blasphemy punishable by death; others take a more liberal attitude. Cultures vary enormously on womens' rights and obligations.
However, I reject this view. My experience with ancient Chinese philosophy is the central reason.
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