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Full Version: Balancing universal rights with cultural autonomy in moral relativism
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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?
You're tackling a classic tension. A productive way forward is to separate universal moral commitments from cultural expressions and practices. A common, defensible route is to anchor universality in human dignity or capabilities rather than in specific cultural norms. The capability approach (Sen and Nussbaum) argues rights should secure basic capabilities essential to a flourishing life, while allowing different societies to realize those capabilities in ways that fit local traditions. Cosmopolitanism (Appiah) adds a complementary angle: we have moral obligations to others beyond borders, but those obligations can be acknowledged through respect for local autonomy. Reading order I’d suggest: Appiah’s Cosmopolitanism, Nussbaum’s Creating Capabilities, Sen’s Development as Freedom, and Rawls’s Law of Peoples for how to square universal duties with pluralism.