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Cultural Differences Argument Analysis

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Cultural Ethical Relativism is a theory that is used to explain differences among cultures, and thus their moral codes. According to cultural relativists, different cultures have different moral codes, and there is no objective truth in ethics. They believe there is no independent standard that can be used to judge one’s custom as better than another’s. In his article entitled “The Challenge of Cultural Relativism,” James Rachels offers his argument against the theory of Cultural Relativism by proving the Cultural Differences Argument is unsound and invalid. Further in his article, Rachels reasons against the claims made by cultural relativists, and he argues there are common values shared by all cultures and there exists an independent standard …show more content…

This analogy shows that there are problems with the logic the Cultural Differences Argument because it tries to “derive a substantive conclusion” about a topic from the fact that there is a disagreement in belief between two groups (Rachel 19). While the premise involves what people believe, the conclusion is about what is the truth, which means the conclusion does not follow from the premise. A deductive argument is valid if its conclusion follows the premises; therefore, the Cultural Differences Argument is invalid. Furthermore, this analogy works as a criticism of the Cultural Differences Argument because it shows that the disagreement between cultures about a topic does not guarantee that there is no objective truth about such a topic. It might simply be because one party (or both) is …show more content…

If the Cultural Relativism is correct, then each culture will have total freedom in which its people can do whatever they want within their society because what is right is determined by the moral code of that society, and we cannot judge them since there is no independent standard that can be used to judge one’s custom. For example, in the late 19th century in the Southern United States, despite the passages of the 13th, 14th, and 15th Amendment had abolished slavery and made African Americans citizens, the majority of White Americans still perceived the Negroes as inferior. Within the society in the South, the culture determined it was right that whites were superior over blacks and American Whites could do whatever they pleased to the African Americans. Consequently, the violent actions White Americans had committed against the Negroes, such as murdering, lynching and preventing blacks to vote, were culturally acceptable in the South. If the Cultural Ethical Relativism is right, then what these whites had done is justified as correct and they did not commit any moral mistakes since their culture permitted such a

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