Alexiev wrote: ↑Sun Nov 09, 2025 4:42 pm
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Nov 09, 2025 5:06 am
Alexiev wrote: ↑Sun Nov 09, 2025 2:15 am
Humans might be "exceptional" if morality is culturally constituted, just as they might be if they were created in God's image.
Morality cannot be "culturally constituted," unless you believe what was done in Russia, China or Nazi Germany was "moral." For each of them had very widespread, defined "cultures" in which the moral abominations they committed went on unchecked. If "being cultural" were all that it took to certify a morality, you could not criticize the many millions they robbed, tortured, exiled and murdered in savage ways. Or you could not criticize female circumcision, slavery or bride-burning, since they are all decidedly "cultural" in North Africa, the Mideast and India respectively. Or you could not object to a political regime in your own country, since your "culture" has produced that kind of leadership.
To say morality is "cultural" is really to say there's no morality at all, because there's almost nothing that some "culture," at one time or another, has not approved or censured.
Why if some cultures' moral codes contradict others, must one assume that morality cannot be culturally constituted?
Easy. Because it would imply that whatever "code" the culture is imposing is
merely arbitrary. And it would make judging anything cross-culturally utterly irrational. Why blame somebody for liking slavery, burning live wives with their dead husbands, or forcing female circumcision on their teenage girls, when these things are just as "cultural" as your antipathy to them is?
So you've deprived yourself of the means of saying that anything is really, genuinely or ultimately right or wrong, morally speaking. So there is no moral information available from a cultural-relativist perspective.
I can use my culturally constituted morality to criticize...
No, you cannot. Not if you genuinely believe your own morality is merely "cultural."
You could say, "Hey, fellah...I don't like the fact that you're enslaving/murdering/raping that person." But they can say, "This is my culture, and for me, it's right." And you have no comeback -- at least, that they ought to care about. After all, you believe your own moral assessments begin and end within your own culture; it has no relevance to theirs.
Moreover, your culture's morality is time-bound, as well. It used to be considered hideous for women to murder babies, and was in fact, a crime and a form of murder; nowadays, it's trumpeted as a "right" for women to murder their babies. Once, homosexuality was illegal in your culture; now it has parades in the streets. Since your own culture shifts, you can't even safely say what's really "right" and "wrong," morally speaking WITHIN your own culture. So again, you're in no position, logically speaking to justify any judgment -- good or bad -- on anything at all.