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Ruth Benedict Summary

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Ruth Benedict was an American anthropologist and folklorist who greatly influenced philosophy through her studies of isolated societies. Her theory of cultural relativism has met both great acclaim and vehement criticism as an explanation of morality and behavior. Stepping away from the stance of ethical absolutism she calls us to take a different and perhaps harrowing approach, examining morals as socially approved customs rather than immovable and eternal cornerstones of all cultures. I argue that Benedict, through her examination of indigenous cultures, provides a sound argument for the relativity of morality – and the consequent lack of a universal moral standard to which all humans can be held. Benedict focused principally on isolated tribes in her essay Anthropology and the Abnormal, stating “Only among these simpler peoples has there been sufficient isolation to give opportunity for the development of localized social forms.”(CR 134). She drew upon these studies to propose several key arguments to her stance of moral relativism. The first of these is the observation of actions deemed as normal—action which falls within the expected behavior of a society. These normal behaviors come about necessarily as a group polarizes in the presence of natural human behaviors, as Benedict states “…it [the behavior] confronts us with a choice of two possible attitudes. One is to brand it as abnormal and reprehensible…The other is to make it an essential attribute of ideal man.”

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