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Cultural Relativism and Our Obligations to Those Outside Canada

Cultural Relativism and Our Obligations to Those Outside Canada. Nov. 24, 2007 Sheldon Chumir Foundation For Ethics in Leadership www.chumirethicsfoundation.ca. Introduction. We want to do three things today:

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Cultural Relativism and Our Obligations to Those Outside Canada

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  1. Cultural Relativism and Our Obligations to Those Outside Canada Nov. 24, 2007 Sheldon Chumir Foundation For Ethics in Leadership www.chumirethicsfoundation.ca

  2. Introduction • We want to do three things today: • (i) Consider our responses to a practice (FGM) which many of us think is morally wrong and the questions that this raises about our moral obligations to those abroad • (ii) Analyse the nature of cultural relativism to see how it is connected to questions about our obligations to those abroad • (iii) Consider arguments concerning the nature and extent of our obligations to those abroad

  3. Female Genital Mutilation • Female Genital Mutilation, often described as female circumcision, refers to partial or total removal of the external female genitalia • FGM is usually performed by a traditional practitioner with crude instruments and without anesthetic. • There has been a call for the medicalization of the practice, but most human rights groups oppose the medicalization and call for a complete ban.

  4. Where is FGM Practised? • FGM is practiced in at least 28 of 53 African countries and is considered an ancient cultural practice. • The prevalence ranges from 98% in Somalia, to 5% in Zaire. • FGM is also found in Oman, United Arab Emirates, Yemen, parts of India, Indonesia and Malaysia.

  5. Why FGM? • Psychosexual reasons: reduction or elimination of the sensitive tissue of the outer genitalia, particularly the clitoris, in order to attenuate sexual desire in the female, maintain chastity and virginity before marriage and fidelity during marriage, and increase male sexual pleasure. • Sociological reasons: identification with the cultural heritage, initiation of girls into womanhood, social integration and the maintenance of social cohesion.

  6. Why FGM? -- continued • Hygiene and aesthetic reasons: the external female genitalia are considered dirty and unsightly and are to be removed to promote hygiene and provide aesthetic appeal. • Religious reasons: some Muslim communities practice FGM in the belief that it is demanded by the Islamic faith. The practice, however, predates Islam. • Myths: enhancement of fertility and promotion of child survival

  7. FGM Health Risks • Immediate complications: • Severe pain, shock, hemorrhage and infection. • In some cases hemorrhage and infection can cause death.

  8. FGM Health Risks – continued • Long-term consequences: • Abscesses, painful sexual intercourse, difficulties with childbirth, including fistula formation. • Increased risk of maternal and child morbidity and mortality due to obstructed labour. • Some researchers describe the psychological effects of the practice as ranging from anxiety to severe depression.

  9. Status of FGM in Canada • Illegal – FGM is a violation of many provisions of the Criminal Code • Contrary to medical ethics – doctors who perform FGM would be disciplined, almost assuredly lose their licenses to practice medicine • Nevertheless, it does occur

  10. FGM and Our Obligations to Others • (Assuming we are opposed to FGM on moral grounds, i.e., we think it is wrong) • Do Canadians have a moral obligation to work to end the practice of FGM? • Do we have moral obligations to the women affected by this practice?

  11. What is Relativism? • “… the moral rightness and wrongness of actions vary from society to society … there are not absolute universal moral standards on all [humans] at all times. … whether or not it is right for an individual to act in a certain way depends on or is relative to the society to which he [or she] belongs.” John Ladd, Ethical Relativism (1973)

  12. Analysis of Relativism • (P1) Moral rightness and wrongness of actions vary from society to society, so there are no universal moral standards held by all societies. • (P2) Whether or not it is right for individuals to act in a certain way depends on (or is relative to) the society to which they belong. • (C) Therefore, there are no absolute or objective moral standards that apply to all people everywhere and at all times. (Pojman, 168)

  13. The Diversity Thesis • (P1) the diversity thesis: an empirical claim about what is the case: “moral rules differ from society to society”

  14. The Dependency Thesis • (P2) the dependency thesis: the idea that the wrongness or rightness of individual acts depends on or is relative to “the nature of the society from which they emanate.”

  15. Dependency Thesis implies… • The dependency thesis says that “Only the standards of Martians should be used to judge the actions of a Martian.” • And notice that the corollary here is that “The standards of Martians should not be used to judge the actions of an Earthling.”

  16. The Question • Relativism is a response to the problem of intercultural moral evaluation • How are we to judge the ethical standards and actions of other people who do not share our cultural background? • Whose standards should apply? • Are there better/worse moral standards?

  17. 1st and 2nd-order judgements • 1st-order: everyday ethical judgements • e.g., “FGM is wrong.” • 2nd-order: “metaethical”—concerns the justification of our everyday judgements

  18. Argument Summary • (C) Conclusion: ethical relativism follows from (P1) and (P2): • (1) there are different standards relative to different cultures/societies • (2) evaluations depend upon a given cultures’ standards • (C) there are no standards that apply across cultures, i.e., to everyone

  19. Individual Ethical Relativism • The doctrine that what is right or wrong is solely a matter of each individual’s personal opinion • A more extreme version of cultural relativism, really • Not our concern today

  20. Descriptive vs. Prescriptive • Descriptive Relativism: picks out the fact of the diversity of ethical practices/values • Prescriptive Relativism: further claim that we ought not to apply the ethical standards of one group to the behaviour of another group

  21. Prescriptive Relativism • Prescriptive relativism is itself a moral judgement: • “You cannot ethically judge other cultures” • Why would someone hold this view?

  22. Why is Relativism Attractive? • Perceived irresolvable moral disagreement • Globalization • Respect for other cultures/beliefs • Tolerance • Scepticism • Fear of imperialism or absolutism • Avoids ethnocentrism

  23. What Are Some Reasons For Rejecting Cultural Relativism?

  24. Why We Aren’t Really Relativists(even if we think we are) • Cultures aren’t uniform

  25. What Do We Mean by “Culture” • We tend to think of cultures or societies as being like a Mondrian painting:

  26. Cultures Are Not Uniform • But, in fact, aren’t cultures/societies more like a Jackson Pollock?

  27. Why We Aren’t Really Relativists(even if we think we are) [continued] • Self-refuting • Asymmetry of judgements • Respect may actually demand criticism • False dichotomy: relativism or absolutism?

  28. The Nature and Extent of Our Obligations to Others We can make moral judgements about practices from other cultures. But how far are we obliged to go in addressing the ethical problem in question?

  29. Shallow Pond Principle “If I am walking past a shallow pond and see a child drowning in it, I ought to wade in and pull the child out …. This will mean getting my clothes muddy, but this is insignificant, while the death of the child would … be a very bad thing”. From Kwame Anthony Appiah, Cosmopolitanism (2006)

  30. Essence of Shallow Pond If something very bad is happening and I can solve the problem at little bother or cost to myself, then I ought to do that

  31. Applied to FGM • Girl in your child’s day-care, ECS or school, or • Child within your extended family • You can intervene to try to ensure that child’s safety, at little (?) cost to yourself • Therefore, you should

  32. What some people have taken the Shallow Pond Principle to mean “If you can prevent something bad from happening at the cost of something less bad, you ought to do it.”

  33. Might sound good, but what does it really mean? Might require that we destitute ourselves “Something less bad” = ? Is it less bad that I do not fix my front steps and am sued for a lot of money? Is it less bad that I do not go to see my ailing father in the US? Is it less bad that I do not live up to a promise to pay for my daughter’s university tuition? Isn’t almost anything I can think of “less bad” than that an innocent child undergoes mutilation?

  34. Try this: “You should do the most you can to minimize the amount of badness in the world” Could this really be our operating principle? Could we live according to it? 1. “the most” – How can we measure this? 2. “can” – What sense of “can”? 3. “badness” – Can we measure badness? Is there only one kind of “badness”?

  35. Applied to FGM 1. What is the most I can do? 2. In what sense can I do anything about FGM in Somalia? 3. If attempts at intervention cause further restrictions and misery for women in those states, have we really done any good?

  36. How about the “Basic Needs” approach? People have a right to the satisfaction of their basic needs, such as, health, food, shelter, education. But even if true, what are your or our moral obligations to help others satisfy those needs?

  37. Back where we started How far do we have to go in meeting our obligations to others? What are our obligations to others? Are there no limitations?

  38. Constraints on how far we have to go to meet basic needs of others – Appiah 1. The primary means of meeting those needs is the nation state (Somalia?) 2. Each of us is required to do only her or his fair share (Why?) 3. Our highest duties are to those to whom we are closest (Why?) 4. Many different things matter to human beings (Yes, but …)

  39. Canada in Afghanistan? How far do we need to go? How many Canadian deaths? How much Canadian money? For how long?

  40. Sources: FGM • http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs241/en/print.html • http://www.path.org/files/FGM-The-Facts.htm • http://www.who.int/reproductive-health/hrp/progress/72.pdf • http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2294/is_51/ai_n9483896/pg_4 • Ali, Ayaan Hirsi. Infidel. Free Press, 2007. • Armstrong, Sally. Veiled Threat. Penguin, 2003. • Tamir, Yael. “Hands Off Clitoridectomy,” Boston Review, Vol 21, No 3, Summer 1996 http://bostonreview.net/BR21.3/Tamir.html • Judging Other Cultures: Replies to Yael Tamir's "Hands off Clitoridectomy“, Boston Review, Vol 21, No 5, Nov 1996 http://bostonreview.net/BR21.5/br21.5.html

  41. Sources: Relativism • Appiah, Kwame Anthony. Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers. W.W. Norton, 2007. • Benedict, Ruth. “The Case for Moral Relativism”, The Moral Life. Louis Pojman, ed. OUP, 2004, 157-65. • Gowans, Chris. “Moral Relativism”, The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2004 Edition), Edward N. Zalta, ed. http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/moral-relativism/ • Hinman, Lawrence. “Ethical Relativism”, Ethics Updates 11/8/2007 http://ethics.sandiego.edu/theories/Relativism/index.asp • Ladd, John. Ethical Relativism. Wadsworth, 1973. • Melchert, Norman. Who’s to Say? Hackett, 1994 • Midgley, Mary. “Trying Out One’s New Sword”, Morality and Moral Controversies 7th ed. John Arthur, ed. Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005, 33-36. • Pojman, Louis. “The Case Against Moral Relativism”, The Moral Life. Louis Pojman, ed. OUP, 2004, 166-90.

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