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Editors Note: The was one of the first articles I read about the subject
of moral relativism three days after September 11, 2001 and it has stuck
with me over the past 14 months. The original can be found here.
Summary
In moral debate in the United States today, many people resort to moral
relativism. They argue that there are no objective moral values which
help us to determine what is right or wrong. They claim "everything
is relative." In order to defend this position, the relativist puts
forth two arguments: (1) Since people and cultures disagree about morality,
there are no objective moral values; (2) Moral relativism leads to tolerance
of practices we may find different or odd. These two arguments are seriously
flawed. In addition, the moral relativist has a difficult time explaining
moral progress, moral reformation, and clear-cut cases of moral saints
and moral devils.
Ethical, moral, and social issues are beginning to dominate the headlines
of major newspapers and the front covers of leading magazines. Unfortunately
many today seem to assume that rationality and logic have no place in
discussions of moral issues, and that there is no way such questions can
be answered. Many assume that we are simply stuck with our opinions, and
that all opinions are relative having no basis in any objective
or unchanging moral values. Should all values and opinions be accorded
equal moral weight?
The purpose of this article is to critically address the problem of moral
relativism, which I believe impedes our ability as a people to critically
and rationally discuss issues of great moral and ethical importance.
MORAL RELATIVISM
In his influential work, The Closing of the American Mind, Professor
Allan Bloom makes the observation that "there is one thing a professor
can be absolutely certain of: almost every student entering the university
believes, or says he believes, that truth is relative...The students,
of course, cannot defend their opinion. It is something with which they
have been indoctrinated."1
By dogmatically asserting that there is no truth, people have become
close-minded to the possibility of knowing truth, if in fact it does exist.
Consequently, lurking behind most of the moral rhetoric in America today
is moral relativism, the belief that there are no objective moral values
that transcend culture or the individual. This is why many people begin
or end their moral judgments with qualifying phrases such as, "It
is only my personal opinion," "Of course I am not judging anyone's
behavior," or "If you think it is all right, that is okay, but
I'm personally against it." Although such assertions have their place,
we often use them inappropriately. Let us consider a few examples of how
moral relativism affects the way many people approach public moral issues.
The Abortion Debate
Some abortion-rights advocates, in response to pro-life arguments, emote
such bumper-sticker slogans as: "Pro-choice, but personally opposed,"
"Don't like abortion, don't have one," or "Abortion is
against my beliefs, but I would never dream of imposing my beliefs on
others." These slogans attempt to articulate in a simple way a common
avenue taken by politicians and others who want to avoid the slings and
arrows that naturally follow a firm position on abortion. It is an attempt
to find "a compromise" or "a middle ground"; it's
a way to avoid being labeled "an extremist" of either camp.
During the 1984 presidential campaign when questions of Geraldine
Ferraro's Catholicism and its apparent conflict with her abortion-rights
stance were prominent in the media New York Governor Mario Cuomo,
in a lecture delivered at the University of Notre Dame, attempted to give
this "middle ground" intellectual respectability. He tried to
provide a philosophical foundation for his friend's position, but failed
miserably. For one cannot appeal to the fact that we live in a pluralistic
society (characterized by moral pluralism/relativism) when the very question
of who is part of that society (that is, whether it includes unborn children)
is itself the point under dispute. Cuomo begged the question and lost
the argument.
The pro-abortionist's unargued assumption of moral relativism to solve
the abortion debate reveals a tremendous ignorance of the pro-life position.
For the fact is that if one believes that the unborn are fully human (persons),
then the unborn carried in the wombs of pro-choice women are just as human
as those carried in the wombs of pro-life women. For the pro-lifer, an
unborn child is no less a human person simply because the child happens
to be living inside Whoopi Goldberg or Cybil Shepherd. Ideology does not
change identity.
Pro-choicers ought to put at least some effort into understanding the
pro-life position. When they tell pro-lifers (as they often do) that they
have a right to believe what they want to believe, they are unwittingly
promoting the radical tactics of Operation Rescue (OR). Think about it.
If you believed that a class of persons were being murdered by methods
that include dismemberment, suffocation, and burning resulting
in excruciating pain in many cases wouldn't you be perplexed if
someone tried to ease your outrage by telling you that you didn't have
to participate in the murders if you didn't want to? That is exactly what
pro-lifers hear when abortion-rights supporters tell them, "Don't
like abortion, don't have one," or "I'm pro-choice, but personally
opposed." In the mind of the pro-lifer, this is like telling an abolitionist,
"Don't like slavery, don't own one," or telling Dietrich Bonhoffer,
"Don't like the holocaust, don't kill a Jew." Consequently,
to request that pro-lifers "shouldn't force their pro-life belief
on others" while at the same time claiming that "they have a
right to believe what they want to believe" is to reveal an incredible
ignorance of their position.
Contrary to popular belief, the so-called "pro-choice" position
is not neutral. The abortion-rights activist's claim that women should
have the "right to choose" to kill their unborn fetuses amounts
to denying the pro-life position that the unborn are worthy of protection.
And the pro-lifer's affirmation that the unborn are fully human with a
"right to life" amounts to denying the abortion-rights position
that women have a fundamental right to terminate their pregnancies, since
such a termination would result in a homicide. It seems, then, that appealing
to moral relativism (or moral pluralism ala Mario Cuomo) to "solve"
the abortion debate is an intellectual impossibility and solves nothing.
Censorship and the Public Good
Another example of how ethical relativism affects the way many people
approach public moral issues can be seen in the arguments concerning the
right to boycott products advertised on television programs which certain
groups believe are psychologically and morally harmful. The usual argument
in response to these groups is, "If you don't like a particular program,
you don't have to watch it. You can always change the channel." But
is this response really compelling? One must point out that these groups
are not only saying that they personally find these programs offensive,
but rather are arguing that the programs themselves convey messages and
create a moral climate that will affect others especially children
in a way they believe is adverse to the public good. Hence, what
bothers these groups is that you and your children will not change the
channel.
I believe that as long as these groups do not advocate state censorship,
but merely apply social and economic pressure to private corporations
(which civil rights and feminist groups have been doing for some time
now), a balance of freedoms is achieved. Both are free to pursue their
interests within the confines of constitutional protection, although both
must be willing to accept the social and economic consequences of their
actions. This seems to best serve the public good. Notice that this position
does not resort to ethical relativism, but takes seriously the values
of freedom, the public good, and individual rights and attempts
to uphold these values in a way that is consistent and fair.
ARGUMENTS FOR MORAL RELATIVISM
There are several arguments people have put forth to defend moral relativism.
Of these, two are especially popular, surfacing again and again in our
culture under different forms. The remainder of this article will be devoted
to examining these arguments.
The Argument from Diversity in Moral Practice
Argument no. 1 states: Since cultures and individuals differ in certain
moral practices, there are no objective moral values. Several objections
can be made to this argument. First, the fact that people disagree about
something does not mean there is no objective truth. If you and I disagree
about whether or not the earth is round, for example, this is not proof
that the earth has no shape. In moral discussion, the fact that a skinhead
(a type of young Neo-Nazi) and I may disagree about whether we should
treat people equally and fairly is not sufficient evidence to say that
equality and fairness have no objective value. Even if individuals and
cultures held no values in common, it does not follow from this that nobody
is right or wrong about the correct values. That is, there could be a
morally erring individual or culture, such as Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany.
Another problem with this argument is that it does not follow from the
fact that cultures and individuals differ in moral practices that they
do not share common values. For example, the fact that some female islanders
who live in the South Seas do not cover their breasts and British women
do doesn't mean that the former do not value modesty. Due to the climate,
environmental conditions, and certain religious beliefs, the people of
the South Seas have developed certain practices by which to manifest the
transcultural value of modesty. Although cultures may differ about how
they manifest such values as honesty, courage, and the preserving of life,
they do not promote dishonesty, cowardice, or arbitrary killing.
Second, sometimes apparent moral differences are not moral differences
at all but factual differences. For example, many people who live in India
do not eat cows because they believe in reincarnation that these
cows may possess the souls of deceased human beings. In the United States
we do not believe cows have human souls. For this reason, we eat cows
but we do not eat Grandma. It appears on the surface, therefore,
that there is a fundamental value difference between Indians and Americans.
This is a hasty conclusion, however, for both cultures do believe it is
wrong to eat Grandma; the Indians, however, believe the cow may be Grandma.
Thus it is a factual and not a value difference that divides our culinary
habits.
Other examples can be produced to show why this first argument for moral
relativism is inadequate.2 It should be noted, however, that the fact
there are some common values among peoples and cultures does not mean
all cultures share all the same values. Obviously certain peoples and
cultures may have developed some values that others have not. Hence, the
discovering of a unique value in a particular society does not in any
way take away from my central thesis that there are certain values to
which all societies either implicitly or explicitly hold.
Third, the argument from differing practices puts an undue emphasis on
differences while ignoring similarities, in addition to giving the mistaken
appearance that all moral conflicts are in some sense insoluble. In discussing
moral conflicts in the United States we tend to focus our attention on
contemporary issues abortion, euthanasia, affirmative action, and
so forth over which there is obviously wide and impassioned disagreement.
However, we tend to ignore the fact that the disputants in these moral
debates hold a number of values in common, that there are many moral issues
on which almost all Americans agree (e.g., "It is wrong to molest
six-year-old girls"), and that a number of past moral conflicts have
been solved (e.g., slavery, women's suffrage). Hence, by focusing our
attention only on disagreements, our perception has become skewed. Philosopher
James Rachels illustrates this point with an example from the sciences:
If we think of questions like this [i.e., abortion, euthanasia, affirmative
action, etc.], it is easy to believe that "proof" in ethics
is impossible. The same can be said of the sciences. There are many complicated
matters that physicists cannot agree on; and if we focused our attention
entirely on them we might conclude that there is no "proof"
in physics. But of course, many simpler matters in physics can be proven,
and about those all competent physicists agree. Similarly, in ethics there
are many matters far simpler than abortion, about which all reasonable
people must agree.3
The Argument from the Virtue of Tolerance
Argument no. 2 for ethical relativism states: Since ethical relativism
promotes tolerance of certain cultural practices that members of Western
civilization may think are strange, ethical relativism is a good thing.
However, although tolerance often is a virtue, ethical relativists simply
cannot justify their own position by appealing to it in this way. First,
the value of tolerance presupposes the existence of at least one real
objective (or absolute) value: tolerance. Bioethicist Tom Beauchamp makes
this observation:
If we interpret normative relativism as requiring tolerance of other views,
the whole theory is imperiled by inconsistency. The proposition that we
ought to tolerate the views of others, or that it is right not to interfere
with others, is precluded by the very strictures of the theory. Such a
proposition bears all the marks of a non-relative account of moral rightness,
one based on, but not reducible to, the cross-cultural findings of anthropologists...But
if this moral principle [of tolerance] is recognized as valid, it can
of course be employed as an instrument for criticizing such cultural practices
as the denial of human rights to minorities and such beliefs as that of
racial superiority. A moral commitment to tolerance of other practices
and beliefs thus leads inexorably to the abandonment of normative relativism.4
Second, tolerance can only be a virtue if we think the other person, whose
viewpoint we're supposed to tolerate, is mistaken. That is to say, if
we do not believe one viewpoint is better than another, then to ask us
to be tolerant of other viewpoints makes no sense. For to tolerate another's
viewpoint implies that this other person has a right to his or her viewpoint
despite the fact that others may think it is wrong. To be tolerant of
differing viewpoints involves just that differing viewpoints, all
of which cannot be equally correct at the same time. The man who supposes
himself tolerant while at the same time he believes nobody is either right
or wrong about any moral value is actually no more virtuous than the man
who supposes his virginity is chastity even though he was born with no
sexual organs. Consequently, real tolerance presupposes someone is right
and someone is wrong, which implicitly denies moral relativism.
It must be acknowledged, however, that there is a noble motive behind
the relativists' appeal to tolerance. They believe their view of tolerance
will help us to better understand other cultures and people without being
hypercritical about their practices. This in turn will keep us from using
such criticism to justify the forced imposition of our own cultural practices
on them, such as putting blouses on the bare-breasted women of the South
Seas or forcing polygamous families to divide and become monogamous. I
can sympathize with this view of transcultural tolerance. As I stated
earlier, however, a cultural practice is different from a cultural value.
It does not follow from different practices that people have different
values.
The local controversies surrounding the elimination of certain books
from public school curricula and libraries is an example of how people
can agree on values and yet disagree on practice. Those who favor more
conservative guidelines, and who are often referred to as advocating censorship,
usually propose that certain materials are not suitable for certain age
groups. They argue that parents, not educational administrators, are best
suited to know what is good for their children. On the other hand, their
opponents, who are often referred to as advocating freedom of expression,
usually propose that it should be up to the teacher and the educational
administrators to choose what is suitable material, although they do believe
that a line should be drawn somewhere. For example, none of these defenders
of freedom of expression defend the placing of hard-core pornography in
the hands of fourth graders.
This, of course, makes the debate all the more interesting, since it
means that both sides agree on the following general principles: a line
must be drawn, certain materials are suitable for certain age groups,
and education is important. Both advocate some kind of "censorship."
They just disagree on who should be the censors, what should be censored,
and on what basis the decision should be made. Therefore, they both hold
to many of the same values, but they disagree as to the application of
these values, and the acceptability of certain factual claims.
Although this distinction between practice and value helps us to be tolerant
of unusual cultural practices, we are still able to make valuable moral
judgments about others and ourselves. First, we are free to criticize
those intolerable cultural practices that do conflict with basic human
values, such as in the cases of genocide in Nazi Germany and apartheid
in South Africa. Second, we are able to admit to real moral progress,
such as in the case of the abolition of slavery. And third, there can
exist real moral reformers, such as Martin Luther King, Jr., and the prophets
of the Old Testament, who served as prophetic voices to reprimand their
cultures for having drifted far from a true moral practice based on basic
human values.
The above three points each of which follow from a belief in objective
transcultural values do not follow from a belief in ethical relativism.
That is to say, to remain consistent the ethical relativist cannot criticize
intolerable moral practices, believe in real moral progress, or acknowledge
the existence of real moral reformers. For these three forms of moral
judgment presuppose the existence of real objective transcultural values.
Although much more can be said about the justification and existence
of certain values,5 the above is sufficient to demonstrate that ethical
relativism is enormously problematic. It shows that we can rationally
discuss and argue with each other about right and wrong without resorting
to the claim that ethical judgments are merely subjective or relative
and that all such judgments have equal validity. For to claim the latter
logically leads one to the bizarre judgment that Mother Teresa is no more
and no less virtuous than Adolf Hitler. I believe this is sufficient to
show ethical relativism to be bankrupt.
Moral relativism has been rejected by a near unanimous number of both
secular and theistic ethicists and philosophers.6 Yet it is still popular
to espouse this view in many of our secularized cultural institutions.
It is thought to be more tolerant, more open, and more intellectually
respectable than the old-fashioned "absolutism."7 As we have
seen, however, moral relativism is inconsistent with tolerance, closed
off to the possibility of moral truth, and an intellectual failure.
Francis J. Beckwith, Ph.D. is a Lecturer of Philosophy at the University
of Nevada, Las Vegas. His latest books are Politically Correct Death:
Answering the Arguments for Abortion Rights (Baker, 1993) and Are You
Politically Correct? Debating America's Cultural Standards (Prometheus,
1993).
NOTES
1 Allan Bloom, The Closing of the American Mind (New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1987), 25.
2 James Rachels, "A Critique of Ethical Relativism," in Philosophy:
The Quest for Truth, ed. Louis P. Pojman (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 1989),
322-23.
3 James Rachels, "Some Basic Points about Arguments," in The
Right Thing to Do: Basic Readings in Moral Philosophy, ed. James Rachels
(New York: Random House, 1989), 40.
4 Tom L. Beauchamp, Philosophical Ethics: An Introduction to Moral Philosophy
(New York: McGraw-Hill, 1982), 42.
5 For a philosophical defense of particular universal values, see C. S.
Lewis, The Abolition of Man (New York: Macmillan, 1947), 95-121; Lewis,
Mere Christianity (New York: Macmillan, 1984), chapters 1-5; Rachels,
"A Critique," 322-24; and J. P. Moreland, Scaling the Secular
City (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1987), chapter 4.
6 E.g., see Rachels, "A Critique"; J. P. Moreland and Norman
L. Geisler, The Life and Death Debate: Moral Issues of Our Time (New York:
Greenwood Press, 1990), chapter 1.
7 I think this is more accurately referred to as moral objectivism, since
not all the values the absolutist holds are absolutely equal; some are
better than others. See Norman L. Geisler, Christian Ethics: Options and
Issues (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1989).
This article is a significantly revised version of a portion of chapter
1 of Francis J. Beckwith's Politically Correct Death: Answering the Arguments
for Abortion Rights (Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1993), 19-25. Reprinted
by permission.
This article first appeared in the Fall 1993 issue of the Christian Research
Journal.
CRI, P.O. Box 7000, Rancho Santa Margarita, CA 92688
Phone (949) 858-6100 and Fax (949) 858-6111
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