J
jdwood983
Guest
From the Ultimate source of information, wikipedia:No. This last part in bold has not been asserted by any consensus of “moral relativists.” In fact, I do not know of a single one that has ever asserted this. Who has ever asserted this?
Actually, I think that you cannot even summary moral relativism correctly; you keep sleeping into absolutist terminology.
Moral relativism may be any of several descriptive, meta-ethical, or normative positions regarding the differences in moral or ethical judgments between different people and cultures:
Descriptive relativism is merely the positive or descriptive position that there exist, in fact, fundamental disagreements about the right course of action even when the same facts obtain and the same consequences seem likely to arise.
Meta-ethical relativism, on the other hand, is the meta-ethical position that the truth or falsity of moral judgments, or their justification, is not objective or universal but instead relative to the traditions, convictions, or practices of a group of people.
Normative relativism, further still, is the prescriptive or normative position that, as there is no universal moral standard by which to judge others, we ought to tolerate the behavior of others even when it runs counter to our personal or cultural moral standards.
The bold is mine, italics theirs. The school of thought is essentially what I have written, that the moral system of Person A is theirs and is equally as worthy as Person B’s moral system that is completely opposite of Person A. I don’t know specific authors or philosophers who have specifically said or written what I’ve written, but that is the general consensus I’ve seen when talking to Relativists.[relativists]…believe not only that, given the same set of verifiable facts, some societies or individuals will have a fundamental disagreement about what one ought to do based on societal or individual norms; but further, that one cannot adjudicate these using some independent standard of evaluation —** the standard will always be societal or personal.**