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  1. ethical relativism, Philosophical view that what is right or wrong and good or bad is not absolute but variable and relative, depending on the person, circumstances, or social situation. Rather than claiming that an action’s rightness or wrongness can depend on the circumstances, or that people’s beliefs about right and wrong are relative ...

  2. Ethical relativism - Criticisms, Objections, Absolutism: Ethical relativism, then, is a radical doctrine that is contrary to what many thoughtful people commonly assume. As such, it should not be confused with the uncontroversial thought that what is right depends on the circumstances.

  3. Ethical relativists hold that there are no such things as objective or universal moral standards or principles that transcend cultures, religions, or individual opinions, but that all moral claims are relative to the person or groups espousing them and apply only to them.

  4. Meta-Ethical Relativism. Normative Relativism. Moral Relativism. Arguments for Moral Relativism. The Argument from Cultural Diversity. The Untenability of Moral Objectivism. The Argument from Cognitive Relativism. Moral Relativism Promotes Tolerance. Objections to Moral Relativism. Relativists Exaggerate Cultural Diversity.

  5. Oct 23, 2019 · Ethical absolutism is a position which argues for the existence of objective values and intrinsically moral acts. As such there can exist moral principles which are always valid and correct. Ethical relativism is a position that holds that moral values are relative to some further instance.

  6. Relativism | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Relativism is sometimes identified (usually by its critics) as the thesis that all points of view are equally valid. In ethics, this amounts to saying that all moralities are equally good; in epistemology it implies that all beliefs, or belief systems, are equally true.

  7. Ethical Relativism. Abstract: The objections to ethical relativism are outlined. Ethical absolutism, ethical nihilism, and ethical skepticism are defined. I. Cultural Relativism (sociological relativism): the descriptive view that different groups of people have different moral standards for evaluating acts as right or wrong. A.

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