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  1. Formulating Relativism. According to moral relativism, saying that an action is wrong is like saying that someone is tall, a claim that is elliptical unless indexed to a reference class, since someone who is tall for an Mbuti may not be tall for a Kikuyu, and it makes no sense to ask whether he is tall simpliciter. 1 Similarly, says relativism, it makes no sense to ask whether an action or ...

  2. -NL: moral values are natural, universally valid-ML: no, they change culture to culture-NL: define difference bt conventional (subjective) moral values and moral values strictly speaking (objective)-ML: not true, always an exception to the objective usually due to culture-NL: define difference bt truths and beliefs and that moral value strictly speaking always true but not always known by all

  3. Apr 14, 2007 · Hence, Wong takes moral ambivalence to presuppose moral value pluralism, the view that there is an irreducible "plurality of basic moral values" (6). Moreover, he argues in the first chapter that we should accept pluralism in this sense. (Thus, Wong defends two distinct kinds of pluralism: moral value pluralism and part (a) of PR.)

  4. Sep 18, 2018 · Relativism is a threat to the Christian faith because it undermines the idea of universal truth on which the latter is based. Ratzinger , as I noted at the beginning of the chapter, is not alone among Christians in holding these or similar views. D. A.

  5. Feb 20, 2023 · I was considering relativism as a philosophy, whereas nowadays in contemporary philosophy it is mostly used as an adjective for specific philosophies: You speak of relativism as if it's a single doctrine. It is not. It's a property of doctrines which merely asserts that there is some form of subjectivity in the doctrine.

  6. Sep 11, 2015 · Relativism, roughly put, is the view that truth and falsity, right and wrong, standards of reasoning, and procedures of justification are products of differing conventions and frameworks of assessment and that their authority is confined to the context giving rise to them. More precisely, “relativism” covers views which maintain that—at a ...

  7. Ethical relativism is the theory that holds that morality is relative to the norms of one's culture. That is, whether an action is 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 ...

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