12-24-2025, 09:17 AM
I'm a philosophy student writing my thesis on critiques of moral relativism, and while I understand the academic arguments, I'm struggling to articulate a coherent response to the practical claim that judging any culture's practices is inherently imperialistic. My research focuses on human rights frameworks, but I find the relativist counter-argument—that these frameworks are themselves Western constructs—to be a significant hurdle. For scholars who have engaged deeply with this debate, how do you navigate the tension between universalist ethical principles and respect for cultural autonomy in a defensible way? Are there contemporary philosophers or case studies you find offer a particularly nuanced way out of this classic impasse, perhaps by redefining universality or grounding ethics in something other than cultural consensus?