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Cultural relativism

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Cultural relativism is the position that beliefs, values, practices, and moral standards can only be understood and evaluated in relation to the cultural context in which they arise — and that no external, culture-independent standard exists by which cultures can be hierarchically ranked. As a descriptive claim, cultural relativism is the foundation of modern anthropology: the methodological injunction to interpret practices from within their own framework before judging them from without. As a normative claim, it is among the most contested positions in contemporary philosophy — generating sharp disagreement about whether cultural context is merely relevant to ethical evaluation or constitutive of it.

Cultural relativism is not the same as moral nihilism, though the conflation is common. The relativist does not claim that all practices are equally valid in some absolute sense; she claims that validity is always relative to a framework, and that frameworks are not themselves subject to framework-independent ranking. This position has powerful defenders and devastating critics, and neither side has won.

Origins: The Boasian Revolution

The modern form of cultural relativism emerged from Franz Boas and his students — Ruth Benedict, Margaret Mead, Melville Herskovits — in the early twentieth century. Boas's methodological revolution in anthropology challenged the evolutionary schemas of his predecessors (Morgan, Tylor, Spencer), which ranked cultures on a single developmental scale from 'primitive' to 'civilized.' Boas argued that this ranking was not a scientific finding but an ethnocentric projection: European scholars had taken their own cultural forms as the apex of development and read everything else as an earlier stage in the same trajectory.

The alternative Boas proposed was historical particularism: each culture has its own trajectory, shaped by its specific environment, history, and pattern of diffusion from neighboring cultures. No single developmental scale applies across cultures. To understand why a practice exists, you must understand the specific historical path that produced it — not its position on a universal scale. Ruth Benedict extended this into a normative thesis: cultures are internally coherent wholes (she used the term 'pattern'), and practices that seem irrational in isolation make sense when understood as part of the pattern. Moral evaluation of foreign practices requires entering the pattern before judging from without.

This was a genuine advance. It displaced the confident Victorian hierarchies and opened the possibility of genuine cross-cultural understanding. But it also generated the tension that has haunted cultural relativism ever since: if practices only make sense within their pattern, what grounds the judgment that the pattern should not include practices we find abhorrent?

The Normative Problem

The descriptive version of cultural relativism — that cultural context is necessary for adequate interpretation — is now a commonplace of social science. The normative version — that cultural context is sufficient to establish moral legitimacy — is where the argument fractures.

James Rachels posed the standard objection: if cultural relativism is correct, then (1) we cannot criticize practices in other cultures, (2) social reformers within a culture are always wrong (because they dissent from cultural norms), and (3) the concept of moral progress becomes incoherent. Each of these consequences is unacceptable. Female genital cutting, chattel slavery, caste discrimination — these cannot be insulated from criticism by appeal to their cultural embeddedness.

The relativist response is that Rachels attacks a straw man. The sophisticated relativist does not claim that cultural embeddedness confers moral immunity. She claims that:

  1. Evaluation requires understanding: you cannot evaluate what you have not understood, and understanding requires entering the cultural framework.
  2. Standards are plural: the relevant question is not whether a practice departs from our standards, but whether it departs from the internal standards the culture uses to evaluate itself, and whether those internal standards are coherent and self-consistent.
  3. Power is asymmetric: historically, 'cross-cultural moral judgment' has functioned as ideological cover for colonial domination. The 'universal standards' invoked to condemn other cultures have reliably been the standards of the culturally dominant.

This response is sophisticated but not conclusive. It delays the question rather than answering it. The internal-consistency standard (does the practice violate the culture's own norms?) still requires a meta-standard: consistent by whose reckoning? Many cultures contain internal debate about their own practices. The power-asymmetry argument is historically compelling but does not establish that universal moral claims are impossible — only that they have historically been made in bad faith.

The Synthesizer Position: Cultural Relativism as Method, Not Metaphysics

The productive resolution — the one the Boasians were reaching toward but did not fully articulate — is to treat cultural relativism as a methodological commitment rather than a metaphysical claim.

As method: understanding precedes evaluation. Before judging whether a practice is harmful, unjust, or irrational, the analyst must understand what problem the practice solves, what alternatives were available, and how it fits the broader pattern of the culture. This methodological injunction does not entail that the practice is immune from criticism — it entails that criticism must be informed. This is not relativism in the normative sense; it is epistemic humility combined with rigor.

As metaphysics: the claim that no framework-independent moral standards exist is a separate, much stronger thesis. It entails that the prohibition on torture, the recognition of basic human interests, and the condemnation of gratuitous cruelty are all merely cultural preferences — no more valid than their contraries in cultures that hold them. This strong relativism has very few serious defenders, because it makes the claim of relativism itself unintelligible: if there are no framework-independent standards, there is no framework-independent basis for saying that cultural understanding is better than cultural ignorance.

The distinction matters because most critiques of cultural relativism attack the metaphysical version while most defenses defend the methodological version. The debate is often confused by this equivocation. What the field of Cross-Cultural Psychology has increasingly found is that the methodological version survives empirical scrutiny — cultural context is genuinely constitutive of cognition in ways that make cultural translation irreducibly complex — while the metaphysical version has no defensible formulation.

Legacy and Contemporary Stakes

Cultural relativism is the contested inheritance at the center of several contemporary debates:

Universal Human Rights and relativism: human rights frameworks are premised on the existence of cross-cultural moral standards — rights that hold regardless of cultural membership. Cultural relativists have challenged whether these frameworks are genuinely universal or merely the latest vehicle for imposing Western liberal norms on non-Western societies. The debate remains unresolved, with important consequences for international law and humanitarian intervention.

Cognitive Anthropology and conceptual universals: cognitive anthropologists and linguists have pursued the question of which cognitive categories are genuinely cross-cultural and which are culturally particular. The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis — that language structure shapes cognition — is a relative of cultural relativism. Contemporary evidence suggests that language effects on cognition are real but bounded: some concepts are robustly universal, others vary significantly across languages.

Standpoint Epistemology and relativism: feminist and postcolonial epistemologists have argued that knowledge is produced from particular social positions and that this positional character cannot be fully transcended. This is a form of epistemic relativism — knowledge is relative to standpoint — that must be distinguished from moral relativism, though the two are often conflated.

The enduring claim cultural relativism makes on the field of knowledge is this: any discipline that ignores cultural context in its data collection, interpretation, or evaluation is not being objective. It is being parochially objective — mistaking the view from one cultural position for the view from nowhere. That claim has proven remarkably durable, and it is now built into the methodological infrastructure of anthropology, psychology, and increasingly the philosophy of science.

The editorial provocation: the collapse of naive cultural relativism as a normative thesis should not obscure the fact that its methodological successor — the demand for culturally informed analysis — has been far more revolutionary in its effects on actual inquiry than any number of universal moral frameworks. Science, philosophy, and law remain far more culturally parochial than they admit. The real work of cultural relativism is not complete; it has barely begun.