A
Ahimsa
Guest
True.Not necessarily, though.
So why are you at a secular instead of a religious university?
True.Not necessarily, though.
Because I am not allowed to leave the county with my kids, for one thing.True.
So why are you at a secular instead of a religious university?
how so?I’m sorry, but I have to say you’re wrong…
I know. I did not say it wasn’t.The act of killing someone is intrinsically evil.
Yes I know. Similarly in Civil law there are various level of crime; the distinction between murder and manslaughter and the various “degrees” thereof. We make a distinction between crimes of passion and cold blooded murder.…I assume you’re talking about the lessening of culpability when a person is not acting with full knowledge or consent. This does not, however, mean the act itself is any less objectively evil; it means the person is less to blame for that evil.
It was wrong (which of course is problematic when you consider serfs on Church owned land)Was it wrong, or not wrong?
then we must have a very different concept of relativism. What you are describing is completely irrational while relativism (as I understand it and as described in the OP) is based on the rational application of standards such as in the above exampleRelativism would say it was right in the past, and wrong now.
This is not the same thing as diminished culpability, which acknowledges that the act itself is always wrong.
Consider these situations:…
- The Relativist position would be that all of the abortions were neither objectiviely good nor objectively evil…not only would they not say “this woman is not responsible” they would not say “this should not have been allowed to happen”.
The OP was mine. I wasn’t aware I had a different concept of relativism than I did two days ago.then we must have a very different concept of relativism. What you are describing is completely irrational while relativism (as I understand it and as described in the OP) is based on the rational application of standards such as in the above example
I can imagine someone trying to describe an abortion by saying something like “culpability is lessened because of rape, economic situation, medical necessity, etc etc” but I don’t think I’ve ever heard even the most strident abortion rights proponent claim that the mother is not responsible for her decision. I thought their whole rationale was the issue of individual “choice” which clearly carries with it individual responsibility.![]()
If you say “abortion is wrong”, this reflects an absolute and universal moral truth. If you add “but this woman didn’t have an abortion on purpose, and therefore she is not to blame” this does not make the statement “abortion is wrong” any less an absolute and universal moral truth. The abortion was still wrong, though the woman is not culpable.In philosophy, moral relativism is the position that moral or ethical propositions do not reflect absolute and universal moral truths but instead are relative to social, cultural,historical or personal references, and that there is no single standard by which to assess an ethical proposition’s truth. Relativistic positions often see moral values as applicable only within certain cultural boundaries or the context of individual preferences.
Moral relativism is not the same as moral pluralism, or value pluralism, which acknowledges the co-existence of opposing ideas and practices, but does not require that they be equally valid. Moral relativism, in contrast, contends that opposing moral positions have no truth value, and that there is no preferred standard of reference by which to judge them.
I meant, of course, the quote from Berger that I originally responded toThe OP was mine. I wasn’t aware I had a different concept of relativism than I did two days ago…
You’ve never met anyone who** denies** there are no absolutes?I meant, of course, the quote from Berger that I originally responded to
I don’t deny what you 're saying. It is just that what you define as relativism is not what comes to my mind when I here the term.
I’ve never met anyone who denies that there are no absolutes but there are plenty of people who will quibble no end over the details of culpability.
Wouldn’t that mean the same thing?not “no absolutes”
not absolutes…NOT absolutes!
pesky keyboard… the “t” keeps sicking![]()
and so are hip huggers, rap, and body piercings… It’s trendy.
Maybe. I read it like this:and so are hip huggers, rap, and body piercings
I wouldn’t recommend those either
“I’ve never met anyone who denies that there are not absolutes…”
seems like a perfectly good sentence construction to me. I’m not sure what your problem is.
then again, I talk funny
Q:Are there not absolutes?
A: Yes, there are absolutes
See, you didn’t deny that there are not absolutes![]()