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Ruth Benedict

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Are Ethics Relative?
Ruth Benedict: Ethics Are Relative
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“Ruth Benedict: Ethics Are Relative
… Morality is culturally relative.”

In this paper, I’m going to discuss the argument that the famous American anthropologist, Ruth Benedict, has put forth regarding ‘ethical relativism’. Ethical relativism is the theory that holds that morality is relative to the norms and values of one's culture or society. That is, whether an action is classified as right or wrong depends on the moral norms of the society in which it is practiced. The same action may be morally right in one society but be morally wrong in another. For the ethical relativist, there are no universal moral standards -- standards that can be universally applied to …show more content…

Benedict’s argument is: (1) If what is accepted by society, based on shared beliefs, as normal behavior varies from culture to culture, then morality would vary from culture to culture. (2) Each culture, based on shared beliefs, decides what is considered acceptable and normal behavior within their society. (3) Therefore, morality is relative to the culture. If Benedict’s argument is true, it would mean that morality exists solely as a creation of individual society’s. Since morality is not an independent, higher concept outside of societal inclinations, it would be able to be changed by society. Therefore, since morality can change at any time, morality fails to exist in reality except on a superficial level, which makes morality meaningless. Why follow any “moral” action in society then? Just get a majority of people in the society to act conversely to the “moral” action also, and then the converse action will become “normal” and thus “moral.” Consequently, the question remains, just because an action is “normal,” does it make the action “moral?” Benedict states in Ethics Are Relative, “We recognize that morality differs in every society, and is a convenient term for socially approved habits.” One thing she doesn’t end up answering in her essay is that, just because it becomes a habit, does this make it right?

There have been times, when I looked up in the sky and wondered, ‘ Oh GOD,

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