>[Bernard Walker, instructor]
Now in the last PowerPoint,
I asked you to answer
two questions on your own.
And I'm really concerned
about the first question:
What makes an action
be right or wrong?
I'm not really interested
in the second question,
but when students answer
the first question,
they often give an answer
that is adequate or appropriate
for the second question,
which is: Where do you
get your beliefs from?
The focus of this PowerPoint
will look at mainly
the first question,
but look at the second question as well
and point out or to reiterate
that ethics is basically based
on what you do to someone
or how you affect someone,
and it's not based on a
mere belief that you may have.
And the position or the view
that holds that latter claim
is called cultural relativism.
I will discuss it in this PowerPoint,
but critique it in the third
PowerPoint after this one.
Let's take a look at four examples
that will illustrate
the distinction between
what makes something
be right or wrong
and the mere belief where
you get your beliefs from.
To make the point again,
let's look at the two questions
from the previous PowerPoint:
What makes a belief true,
or what makes an action be true?
And where do you get beliefs from?
You see these two questions
on the far left.
Let's consider four examples.
The first one: “Oatmeal reduces
your overall cholesterol level.”
We can ask: Where did you get
the belief that that's true?
There are many answers you can give.
(You could perhaps say your doctor.)
But what makes the belief true
is that oatmeal actually does
reduce cholesterol in your body.
The truth of that belief,
what makes it be true,
is what oatmeal does in the world,
not your belief but what
oatmeal does to your body.
The second example, suppose it's true:
"Sometimes Hmong patients
refuse surgery and blood draws."
If we were to ask the question:
Where did you get this belief from?
supposing it is true,
you can give many answers,
and one would be that you have
a Hmong friend who told you this.
What makes the belief true
is simply that this is what
Hmong people sometimes do.
The belief is made true by what
Hmong people do or do not do
in a hospital or medical clinic.
The third example says: "The best way
to lose weight is diet, not exercise."
Let's suppose that statement is true.
We can ask: Where did you
get this particular belief from?
Why do you believe it?
Basically, that's the question.
Again, many answers could be given.
You could say you came to this belief
from what you read in the magazine
or from what a dietitian
told you about certain diets.
But what makes the belief true
is what a diet does to you
in terms of you losing weight.
So the truth of the belief
is not based on you
or based on your dietitian or a magazine.
What makes the belief true is simply
the effect the diet has on your body,
something that is happening in the world.
In this case,
it's not something you're doing;
it's something that the food that
you're digesting does to your body.
So these first three examples
are definitely evidence-based,
meaning that they are true
and you discover they are true
by evidence of things
that they do in the world.
Now the fourth example
is quite different.
It says that it's true that you
cannot run with a basketball
when you play basketball.
If the question were posed:
Where did you get this belief from?
Again, any number of
answers could be given.
You can say your high school or middle
school gym teacher told you this
or your neighborhood friends
at the park or your parents.
All kinds of answers could be given
as to where you got this belief from.
But to the question, "What makes it
be true?" would be a simple answer.
The inventor of basketball,
who is Dr. James Naismith.
So the reason why it's true
that you cannot run with a basketball,
what makes that belief true,
unlike the other three
examples on this slide here,
are not events in the world,
but internal to Dr. Naismith,
his beliefs about how the game
of basketball should be played.
So this last example actually
is not evidence-based
because it's stating something
true about a person's belief,
namely what this man,
Dr. James Naismith believes
about how his game that he
invented should be played.
However, oatmeal is not in a person's
mind and neither is cholesterol.
The interaction between those two
things are outside of your mind;
and whether or not oatmeal reduces
cholesterol has everything to do
with the interaction between
oatmeal and cholesterol.
The same thing would be true
about Hmong patients.
What makes it true
that they refuse surgery
is, in fact, that they refuse surgery.
What makes a diet-- what causes
a diet to make you lose weight
is simply the effect
a diet has on your body.
But with basketball, what makes
it wrong to run with a basketball
is not something about the world,
because before Dr. James Naismith
was born or invented the game,
there was nothing called basketball.
What makes it wrong to run
with the ball is simply he said so
because the truth of that statement
is based in his mind,
Dr. James Naismith.
The truth of what oatmeal
does to cholesterol
is not in a person's mind
but in its effect on your body.
Again, the same thing with
blood draws with Hmong patients
and diets and losing weight.
The point overall
that I want to make here
is that with ethics, it is evidence-based
like the first three examples here,
not like the last example
with basketball.
What makes murder be wrong
or what makes rape be wrong
is not your belief, not my belief,
not the beliefs of a culture or a society.
What makes murder or rape be wrong
is what you do to someone
that describes rape or murder.
It's what you do to another person
that makes those actions wrong.
Rape is wrong because
you are causing harm
(physical, psychological, emotional,
or spiritual) to another person.
So you may say that rape is wrong,
and that would be true,
but what makes it be wrong
is not your belief about rape,
but what rape actually
does to another person.
Again, ethics is about what you do,
and you could discover the evidence
for what people do to other persons
by looking at events in the world.
Like science, medicine, in general,
ethics is evidence-based.
So when we say ethics
is evidence-based,
we're looking for evidence of events,
of things you do to
other persons or things.
So back to Question 1
in the previous PowerPoint,
if you said society, culture, family,
personal perspective, feelings, religion,
these would not be good
coherent answers to Question 1,
and the rest of this PowerPoint will
attempt to show you that that's the case.
Let me give one example
with family and religion.
How did your family make
an action be right or wrong?
I'm not sure what answer could be given.
Your family could tell you or inform
you that an action is right or wrong,
but it couldn't make
an action be right or wrong.
Or consider religion.
A religion can inform you
(say, through the Bible)
that an action is wrong,
say that it's wrong to murder someone.
But surely the Bible does
not make murder be wrong;
it simply informs you that it is
the case that murder is wrong.
The most popular answer
people give to Question 1
is the top of this list here:
culture or society,
which I will use interchangeably.
And it also is like religion.
Cultures and society cannot
make murder be right or wrong.
Those are just not good answers
to Question number 1.
Among those answers
that I just talked about,
culture turns out to be
the most popular answer
that people give to Question 1.
Let's focus our attention on culture
as we try to figure out what makes
ethics be what it is, what it's about.
And I don't want to beat this
into the ground with you,
but it's important
that you really get this point.
Going back to Questions 1 and 2,
there is a big difference between,
if we're talking culture,
saying a culture makes
an action right or wrong
and saying that a culture informs you
that an action is right or wrong.
So let's look at another example
of this distinction between 1 and 2
as we focus on the issue of culture.
On this slide here, Statement number I
is answering Question number 2
from the previous PowerPoint.
That is, it’s answering the question:
Where do you get
your ethical beliefs from?
How do you come to believe what you
believe about murder, rape, so forth?
And Statement number 2 below
is answering Question 1
from the PowerPoint:
What makes an action right or wrong?
Let's take a look here.
Here, number 1, it says:
"My cultural upbringing taught
that murder and rape are wrong,
and that people should
be treated fairly."
This is a very good answer to the question
"Where do you get your beliefs from?"
In this case,
since we're talking about culture,
you can say culture informed you
that murder and rape are wrong.
But now let's look at
the second statement here.
“My cultural upbringing makes
murder and rape be wrong.”
It makes treating people fairly, right."
Now, the second statement
is rather incoherent.
It's quite problematic.
What would it mean
to say that your culture
makes murder be right or wrong?
It's just not informative.
The first statement here is that culture
teaches you what's right or wrong,
but it would not make any sense to say
that your culture has a magic ability
to make murder be right or wrong
or [rape] be right or wrong.
Another example about culture:
When the Rosebud Sioux Tribe
says it is ethically wrong
to build the Keystone XL
pipeline on its reservation,
it is not saying Number 1 here,
namely, “it is ethically wrong
for the Keystone XL pipeline
to be built on the Rosebud
[Sioux] Tribe’s reservation
because we believe it's ethically wrong.”
That statement is simply saying it's wrong,
merely because that's what they believe.
Again, that's sort of like
the example of basketball.
What makes it wrong to run with the ball
is simply what Dr. James Naismith believed
about how the game should be played.
We don't want to say that about ethics.
Rather, the second statement
is more likely
what a representative of
the Sioux Tribe would say,
namely that it's ethically wrong
for the pipeline to be built
on the reservation
because doing so will cause
harm to the people there,
and they could even add
“to cause problems with sacred ground.”
Despite all of this, some of you
might be getting a little irritated
and say something like the following:
Why is culture not a good answer
for making actions be right or wrong?
Who are we to say culture is wrong?
That is, isn't it a bit arrogant to say
that another culture is wrong
if they disagree with us?
The short answer here is not about
disagreeing with you or anyone else
as it is that no one makes
any action right or wrong.
It's again, what you do in the world.
So even if your belief is correct
about murder being wrong,
your belief is not what
makes murder wrong;
it's what someone is
doing to another person
when an act like murder occurs.
Let me try to finally
summarize this point
by simply making a distinction
between what culture
really addresses,
and it's not going to be ethics.
But what is the focus of culture?
This requires us to make
some definition distinctions.
So if we were to focus
only on culture now.
and in doing so, you will see
that it really would be
unrelated to ethics,
but let's first define culture.
I'm looking here at the free dictionary.
Here's the definition
found in a dictionary.
It says culture is the integrated system
of socially acquired values,
beliefs, and rules of conduct
which delimit the range of accepted
behaviors in any given society.
So if you want to know
what culture you belong to,
there's a set of socially set values
(values being things that are
important to a group of people),
a set of beliefs that those
people identify with,
and a certain way of behaving.
If you value these things,
believe these beliefs,
and act a certain way within a certain
range that that group has decided,
then you're part of that group.
And that's basically what a culture is.
It includes things like what food is
identified with a particular culture,
clothes, greetings, things of that sort.
If you don't adopt these values,
these beliefs, and ways of behaving,
that doesn't mean you're
doing anything wrong.
You're just not identified
with that particular culture.
This is the definition of culture.
Let's take a look at
some examples here.
Let's consider customs
within cultures like weddings.
In the United States,
a typical wedding time-wise
is about 45 minutes to an hour.
In India, it lasts several days.
Neither time the culture of India
or the United States is right or wrong.
This is because customs and
cultures are not true or false.
We just don't use words like true or false
or even correct or incorrect
or wrong or right.
It's not wrong to have a wedding
45 minutes or several days.
These are just different ways that different
cultures perform wedding ceremonies.
But what they do is not based on
anything out there in the world.
They just simply made a decision
that a wedding will be
(in the case of the United States)
45 minutes to an hour;
and in India, over several days.
Let's shift from weddings to clothing,
another custom within cultures.
The clothes from the 1970s
is definitely not what most people on
planet Earth wear in the 21st century,
but that's okay.
There's nothing wrong
about wearing leisure suits,
which is what these models are wearing.
The culture of the 1970s had
a preference for leisure suits,
but it was neither right nor wrong
for them having this preference.
Leisure suits were simply
the taste at that time.
Here's an important point.
Tastes of any sort are
not true, they're not false;
they're not right, they're not wrong.
They do change over time, however.
We know this
because more than likely,
none of you have a taste or
preference for a leisure suit.
Here's another instance of clothing
as a custom of a culture.
This is, of course, the 1980s.
The cheesy '80s clothes
displayed above in these photos
is not better, more correct
than the clothes of the 1970s.
The big hairdo and the pastel colors
are the essence of the 1980s.
If you're from that time,
you would recognize that.
With that said, they are simply
different ways of wearing clothes,
the clothes you that you see
these people are wearing,
these actors and actresses.
And these clothes simply
express the various tastes
that people had at that time.
These tastes are not true,
they're not false.
We could, if not use the word “taste,”
we could say "preference."
But preferences and tastes
are not true, they're not false.
They're not right, they're not wrong.
They're just what we had in the 1980s
and we no longer have a taste or a
preference for these kinds of clothes.
The clothes haven't changed.
What has changed is our taste for them.
Here's a final example of clothing
within various cultures.
What you see on the left
would be what's best
described as hipster culture,
and what's on the right would
be best described as hip-hop.
These are just different
ways of wearing clothes,
reflecting different tastes in clothes.
Again, these clothes are neither
right nor wrong, true or false.
They are simply expressing
the taste that people living today
(as opposed in the 1980s and ‘70s)
have about what looks good
to wear in the streets.
So it would be incorrect to say
that the clothes that the hipsters wear
is more correct, better than what
people wore in the ‘70s or ‘80s
or what hip-hop wears in distinction
from what hipsters wear.
These are just two different ways
of how people prefer to wear clothes.
There's nothing right or wrong
about any of these examples.
That's because they simply are
expressing tastes and preferences
that people have within a culture.
On a side note here,
if you do wear your pants
as low as the hip hop culture does,
over a period of time,
your spinal— your skeletal system,
I should say your backbone will be
elongated as this illustration shows.
(That's a little comedy there for you.)
Our last example here is about greetings.
In some parts of the world
(in Asia, in particular), people bow.
There's nothing right
or wrong about bowing,
but that's just what people
in Asia have decided to do
when they express greeting someone.
They have various levels of bowing
based on the respect they
have for the other person.
Again, that's just what they do.
There's no right way about greeting,
but that's what they chose in their
culture as a way of greeting people.
In other cultures
(like in the United States),
people shake hands.
That's the way of greeting people
in this country in particular.
There's nothing right or
wrong about shaking hands.
But it's interesting here,
whether you bow or shake hands,
you could do both and there's nothing
ethically wrong or right about either one,
just different preferences or different
conduct behavior, I should say,
that people adopted that identify
them within a given culture.
And ethics is not that way.
It's not about what we believe we
should do for some arbitrary reason
that we just made that decision,
like inventing a sport
or a game like chess.
It's about what we do in the world
in terms of the consequences of our
action and behavior toward others.
That's what ethics is going to be about
in a large sense, in a broad sense.
It won't be based on our
mere beliefs about the world,
but in fact, what we do
out there in the world
toward others and other living beings.
Now I have tried in several ways
to describe what culture is
and indirectly make the claim
that culture and ethics are not
related in any significant way.
But with that said, there
are those people in society
who believe that culture
is the foundation of ethics,
and this view is called
cultural or ethical relativism.
Okay, so I'm going to let you know now
that this is a view that I will be
critiquing as we move along.
It really holds no place in ethics,
but it's very common,
as I've been trying to point out.
Cultural relativism has two premises,
I guess you could say.
One is that not only is it true
that ethical beliefs vary
from culture to culture,
such that there's a set of
ethical beliefs for each culture,
but each culture’s set of beliefs
is normative and true.
Okay, so let's unpack that.
The first claim is not controversial.
That is, if you go to a given culture
in some country somewhere,
that the ethical beliefs of that
culture would be likely different
from the ethical beliefs
of another culture
in another country somewhere.
So this is not radical.
This is not a mysterious
or problematic claim.
In fact, we have a name for Number I,
and that's what we call
descriptive relativism.
Descriptive relativism basically says
that if you go to a culture
or investigate a culture
as an anthropologist or as a sociologist,
you would discover that various
cultures have different beliefs,
whether they be ethical beliefs or
beliefs about any number of issues, okay?
So the person who proposes
descriptive relativism
is simply, as the phrase is stated here,
simply describing the relativism
that exists among different cultures.
Okay?
So if an anthropologist or a sociologist
said something like this:
“In culture X, they believe in honor killing,
where the family could
stone to death their daughter.
That's just what they believe in culture X.
But culture Y has a
totally different view
that says people should not be killed
because they dishonor the family.”
The person who reports this information
is not taking a side or a position.
They're simply describing
two different viewpoints
about, say, marriage,
where one believes that the daughter
should marry who the parents have selected;
and in another culture,
they don't hold that same view.
So descriptive relativism does not
favor a certain ethical position.
It simply describes the variation
that is out there in the world
among different cultures.
So that's the first premise
of cultural relativism,
which is that there are
various beliefs in the world
that are held by various cultures.
Ethical beliefs vary
from culture to culture.
That is, again, not problematic.
Premise number 2 is
where we have problems.
Here, cultural relativism says
that each culture's ethical beliefs
are normative and true,
meaning [that] this is
how things out to be done
and these beliefs are true
within the context of that culture.
That's like saying that if Hitler believed
that Aryans were the superior race,
that would be true within his culture,
meaning, not because they just believe it,
but it's actually true that Aryans are
the superior race within that culture.
Okay?
So Premise number 2
is what's problematic.
It is making a claim that not only
do beliefs vary from culture to culture,
but these beliefs are actually true
and they have a normative status,
meaning that you should honor and
be bounded to them or obey them.
Okay?
Descriptive relativism, again,
does not make that claim.
It just simply says that ethical
beliefs vary from place to place.
Cultural relativism says
the mere belief of a claim
is what makes it be true.
It is not considered true;
it actually is true within
that particular culture.
Cultural relativism is problematic.
Descriptive relativism isn't.
So in conclusion, what I've tried to do here
is point out that cultures consist of
normative beliefs, values, and actions
that are neither true nor false,
meaning there's a certain expectation
of how you ought to
believe within a culture,
how you ought to see things.
There's a certain way
that you ought to value,
there are certain values you ought to have,
and there are certain things
you ought to do within a culture
that are neither true nor false,
via things like customs, for example.
Ethics, on the other hand,
consists of beliefs, values,
and actions that are objective
and involve things about
what we do to each other,
things we do in the real world,
and they are true,
regardless of the culture
that they are expressed in.
The culture does not determine ethics.
But there is a view
that denies what I just said,
and this is called cultural relativism,
and we will destruct and
critique cultural relativism
in the next PowerPoint.