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Author Topic:   Human rights, cultural diversity, and moral relativity
Modulous
Member
Posts: 7801
From: Manchester, UK
Joined: 05-01-2005


Message 7 of 270 (434321)
11-15-2007 12:10 PM
Reply to: Message 1 by Silent H
11-15-2007 1:11 AM


There are many ways of structuring societal interaction, and FGM is one of them. They are all valid, and all of them generally function.
However, not all ways are equally desirable or valuable. Desireable to who? Valuable to who? People, is the basic answer to that. When cultures come into contact with one another, there will be a clash. Some ways of doing things will vanish, some will be adopted and adapted creating a kind of merging - others will remain unaffected.
Who decides on these kinds of things? The people involved in the clash. At the individual level: neighbours might clash over FGM, one having done it to his daughter, another revolted by the idea. Maybe one side will be convinced to change as a result, maybe they won't. However, both sides will instigate some degree of social consequences on the other - which may yet again cause one of them to change their minds about affairs.
It can also happen at the political level. One political power exerting argument, and political consequence on another political power to stop doing something (or start doing something) such as FGM. It might elicit change, which is the primary function of exerting consequences for behaviour that is not desired in society and incentives to behaviour that is.
You might argue that it isn't necessarily right to apply pressure either political or social to elicit a change in another group's culture but that argument effectively undermines itself since applying pressure to elicit change is part of our culture and your argument can only lead at best to changing our culture.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 1 by Silent H, posted 11-15-2007 1:11 AM Silent H has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 22 by Silent H, posted 11-18-2007 1:55 PM Modulous has replied

  
Modulous
Member
Posts: 7801
From: Manchester, UK
Joined: 05-01-2005


Message 29 of 270 (435039)
11-18-2007 5:41 PM
Reply to: Message 22 by Silent H
11-18-2007 1:55 PM


I am arguing that changing one's own culture makes sense and does not cross a boundary which we have set for others trying to change ours.
Why does changing one's own culture make sense? What is one's own culture - where does my culture stop? The moment I leave Britain, or the moment I leave Manchester, or the moment I leave my house?
I am aware of no boundary that we have set for ourselves that we ourselves cross. We here in Britain have been invaded by American culture, was that wrong? We have exchanged cultural elements with India. Was that wrong?
Your post appeared to be setting out the reality of how changes occur, that such things are inevitable. But isn't there some limits on how this should occur?
I'm not sure limits are possible.
If say China became pretty powerful and started stamping out overt democratic institutions, as well as personal freedoms, using leverage to enact such changes... wouldn't you say that is not right and stand up for your individual rights?
Of course I would. And maybe my culture would vanish and be replaced by a far reaching Chinese culture. Chinese culture has likewise been altered by Communism. Who can say which one will win, but there are certain outcomes I would prefer.
Am I wrong that national and cultural sovereignty was once thought important from those within the individual rights community?
Well, the time for nation states may be limited - who knows? Either way, I don't have a problem with either national or cultural sovereignty. There are things we try and stop nations doing, and there are things we try and stop cultures doing.
The reason I like cultural diversity is that it allows for individualism where a monoculture by its very nature cannot.
I like cultural diversity too. Humans are renowned for doing some things in different ways and that's a good thing.
If we allow, or dictate, that all cultures must at some point reach an agreement of what IS acceptable, then disagreement itself will become a crime.
We don't have to agree on all things. We will just eventually come to agree that some things should be criminal always. We stand up against slavery and child labour (sort of), that does not imply that disagreeing about music will become a crime.
Most of the world is homophobic, should we let them change our current trend toward such rights? Many are not supportive of women's rights, does that mean we should barter that away for something?
Of course not. As I mentioned before, the cultures that do not support women's rights will try and change our culture. Being a culture that does support women's rights we will try and change their culture.
I see IR as a limit we have placed on negotiations for ourselves. From this national rights emerge. Give up one and we give up the other.
I don't follow. If we believe in natural rights, why should we not feel the compulsion to make those natural rights universal? How does that compulsion lead to the giving up of those natural rights?
If we manage to convince other people that certain cultural practices should be abandoned, how does this mean that we give up the right to free speech, for example?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 22 by Silent H, posted 11-18-2007 1:55 PM Silent H has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 31 by Silent H, posted 11-18-2007 6:18 PM Modulous has replied

  
Modulous
Member
Posts: 7801
From: Manchester, UK
Joined: 05-01-2005


Message 47 of 270 (435172)
11-19-2007 4:17 PM
Reply to: Message 31 by Silent H
11-18-2007 6:18 PM


Changing one's own culture makes sense because one is a part of that
culture. I mean I'm not sure how that does not make sense.
How does it being one's own culture make it make sense?
As I do agree, change will occur. The question is on limits.
Limits can't be set, only self-imposed.
Thus we can start with you can change anything everywhere no matter
the means, and whittle it down from there. I am arguing that the concept
of individual rights itself, those rights I demand for myself which
cannot be negotiated away, sets the shape for that final whittled
product.
So the natural rights you have to come to accept as part of your culture
should set a line that you should not cross when dealing with other
cultures. I don't think anybody here would disagree with you. All I
have said is that this works both ways.
I would take it, that someone outside of my community (the largest
unit of community we have) does not have a legitimate right to force
change on my nation
I don't see how the nation is the largest unit of community, there are
plenty of different cultures within one nation - and there are plenty of
cultures that exist way beyond nations. I would have thought the world
was the largest unit of community we have. And I'm sorry to say it, but
other nations have every right to refuse to engage in trade with your
nation should they wish. That might end up forcing a change in your
nation and it would be perfectly legitimate.
Can we agree the "British invasion" of the 50s/60s was not the same
thing as Spain's conquest of Central America? That perhaps the latter is
not considered a just method anymore, given international law regarding
national sovereignty as we set up based on individual rights?
I'm not suggesting we got to war at the drop of the cultural hat.
This appears contradictory. That we do something hypocritical does not
argue hypocrisy is the best method.
Life is filled with apparant contradictions. I don't see why it is
hypocritical to desire that other people are afforded the same comforts or
rights as you yourself are.
I mean sure I like individualism, but there are things we stop people
from doing... what limits do we have on THAT? Or do we expect from the
concept of individual rights? Not everything is on the table.
We have national laws. Just like we have international laws. What's the
big mystery?
I didn't claim that all things will become criminal, and didn't mean to
claim that all things thought criminal will be uniform throughout. I
meant exactly what you said above. And in that situation, disagreement
itself will be criminal. Where will people turn, when the whole world
has that single idea and the will to enforce it.
You said that disagreement itself will become criminal, and yet there is no
compelling reason to think that if we spread 'freedom of speech' that would
end up with disagreement becoming illegal. Where do people that want to
engage in slavery turn to when the whole world has the idea it is bad?
Sucks to want a culture nobody else wants, but there you go.
Or is it really just dog eat dog, and we should not worry about the
hypocrisy? I mean you come off with this attitude, yet don't you argue
the absolute moralists are in error and should not be foisting their
beliefs on others? If you took the position that whatever they can get
away with is fine, then I might feel your position was more seriously
held.
Depends what you mean by 'fine'. It is completely normal and natural and
to be expected that other people will fight for their culture to be held by
others...cultures are often viral like that. I'm simply part of that,
hoping that the way I do things will spread to other people, and at the
same time embracing the idea that I might have the way I do things changed
by others.
First of all you sort of blew by one of the important questions I asked
in my OP. What do you mean by "natural rights"? Is that like natural
law? I'm not trying to be sarcastic in this question.
As wiki says:
quote:
Natural rights are a theory of universal rights that are seen as
inherent in the nature of people and not contingent on human actions or
beliefs.
And that's the problem. We secured these rights from... YOU
GUYS!!!
Right, and we secured some of them for ourselves, you guys went to town
with them thanks to one of our guys (cheers TP), and then gave them right
back to us. It was brilliant.
While it is nice and all to think that others might pick this up, I'm
not sure why
there is a burning need to FORCE that on everyone. I mean in that case
Bonaparte was fantastic, so is Bush.
When you conceive of universal rights, it would be somewhat hypocritcal if
you didn't desire all governments to universally accept them. Some
governments won't be argued into adopting them and military force or
economic pressure is needed to elicit that change.
Convince? I said convincing is fine. Figurative war of ideas is one
thing. Literal war (economic and military) is something altogether
different.
So other cultures should be forced into acting against their conscience in
matters of who they want to buy their products off? If a nation endorses
child labour, we should still buy their products? We should sell them
material that can aid them maintain the child labour economy?
If one really believes the LATTER is okay, then you have de facto given
up free speech. You believe that if someone can come in and use military
or financial power to limit your speech, that's okay. Unless you are
going to hold a hypocritical position of fine for me, wrong for you.
Right?
Freedom has to be fought for, there is nothing inherently wrong in fighting
for it. Power has to be fought for, and there is nothing inherently wrong
in fighting for it. There is a struggle between the quest for power versus
the quest for freedom from other's power. I'm on freedom's side. I don't
see how this ends up with me giving up free speech - could you try spelling
it out for me?

This message is a reply to:
 Message 31 by Silent H, posted 11-18-2007 6:18 PM Silent H has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 50 by Silent H, posted 11-19-2007 6:26 PM Modulous has replied

  
Modulous
Member
Posts: 7801
From: Manchester, UK
Joined: 05-01-2005


Message 73 of 270 (435258)
11-20-2007 2:23 AM
Reply to: Message 50 by Silent H
11-19-2007 6:26 PM


The reason directly changing one's culture "makes sense" is that would fall within the limits we took for ourselves.
And the reason changing another culture makes sense is that it would fall within the limits we took for ourselves.
And yes there are subcultures within a nation... and?
So I can't take part in political pressure to emancipate women in other countries but it makes sense for me to try and change the country-life culture within my own nation even though it isn't my culture?
Now you raise the question of a world community. Which is exactly what I was trying to discuss within the OP. Yeah we all share the same world, and there are nations and peoples that interact within it, but is it united in a community? Perhaps we have different definitions of community?
My street isn't united as a community, but we have to learn to play by certain rules in order to live with one another peaceably. As we come into contact with other nations, certain rules will emerge that enable us to live together peaceably.
I'll repeat an earlier example. While there are wolves all around the world, and have many different packs which may interact with each other, do they all share the same "community"? I think that is an abstraction which does not represent reality.
Wolves is just silly. How often do Wolves in Germany encounter Wolves in America?
I never said that nations cannot stop trade, nor that international law did not exist so I don't know what your points on that were about. And yes change might result when a culture finds itself isolated. Certainly if a culture is expecting help from others, it will likely run into scenarios where change is necessary.
So we are in agreement that social and political consequences to enact cultural change is legitimate?
Here is a clear miss on what I am saying. No it is not hypocritical to desire other people are afforded the same comforts/rights as yourself.
However it IS hypocritical to attempt to IMPOSE the same comforts and rights you hold dear onto others, when one would not want such concepts (as the other views it) imposed on onesself.
You can see the difference, right?
Of course that would be hypocritical. If I was living in a culture with limited I would want to have freedom 'imposed' upon me. Therefore it is not hypocritical to want to 'impose' freedom on others.
A THEORY inherent in the nature of people and NOT contingent on human actions and or BELIEFS? That is a bit of pretzel logic. It is a belief itself and acted on by humans. I mean where else is it coming from? Oh yes, the NATURE of people. Who decides that? Oh yeah, people.
What of it?
he fact that an individual conceives of "universal rights" might very well entail it being applied to anyone and everyone. That doesn't MAKE it universal, anymore than people with an idea of "absolute morality" makes their morality absolute.
Well obviously. I haven't said otherwise. But if you conceive that certain rights should be universal, then it would be inconsistent to not want those rights to be universal.
Do you honestly EMBRACE the idea someone will force you to change?
I happens all the time. It's part of being alive. It's part of humanity. I love it.
Embracing it would mean you'd be excited should homosexuality get banned, women's rights undercut, and FGM made routine... eh, if that's what people want and can force on me!
That doesn't mean I wouldn't fight it.
Frankly, from your apparent stated position, what would be wrong with us simply nuking the rest of the world right now... or anyway killing everyone else off, just to ensure those that are left believe in our way of life? It would seem like something you'd have to embrace.
Taking away people's lives is to be avoided whenever possible. That's my culture and I would want it more universal. Other people's cultures might suggest we should nuke everybody.
My solution is that we accept this and try and change the other culture. Your solution is...what? We should let the other culture stay as it is for the sake of multiculturalism?

If I understand your position it is this:
It is OK to enact certain social consequences for cultural disparity (economic sanctions for example) in some situations. We should expect other countries to do likewise to us. We should expect argument and debate as a means to change our culture as we change others.
We should have limits on how far we go to change certain cultural practices - presumably those limits are somewhat determined by the severity of the cultural practice. We don't drop nukes because we don't like American self pitying Rock, and prefer Brit-rock, for example.
If so, you presumably don't see any problem with using argument and boycotting and political pressures to try and elicit change in cultures that engage in extreme body modification. I don't think nator suggests we nuke or go to war as a first option for these kinds of things. In the end then, you seem to be agreeing with those people you say you disagree with.
Edited by Modulous, : No reason given.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 50 by Silent H, posted 11-19-2007 6:26 PM Silent H has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 84 by Silent H, posted 11-20-2007 6:52 PM Modulous has replied

  
Modulous
Member
Posts: 7801
From: Manchester, UK
Joined: 05-01-2005


Message 106 of 270 (435471)
11-21-2007 2:26 AM
Reply to: Message 84 by Silent H
11-20-2007 6:52 PM


Yes it would fall within your given rights to effect political change of "country-life" culture within your own nation, but not so for emancipating women in other nations. The community limit is the nation.
Why?
If you think you have voting rights elsewhere, you are mistaken.
What does voting rights have to do with this? Do people with no voting rights in their own country have no say about their own culture now?
If you are forcing legal changes in other cultures where you have no vote, over the say of those people, then you are acting contrary to national sovereignty.
You keep using the word 'force'. What do you mean by it?
There is a tacit agreement that change can be effected between you by your nationality.
And there is tacit agreement that this works internationally too.
We would not allow royalty to exist, you would.
You got the 'right' to not allow royalty by force, remember?
Your insult regarding my wolf example doesn't make sense. Just because they lack tech to reach each other is something completely different. WE can just as easily fly them over as we fly ourselves, the packs will not simply take the new group as insiders because of their wolfness.
Fine, and when they come into contact with one another, if there are any differences in wolf culture - there will be a change. Since humans come into contact with one another all the time - directly and indirectly - this is much more common in humans than it is with wolves. Also - we have a much more complex culture than wolves will have due to superior communication.
Yes I do agree that some forms of political/social action are legitimate. The ones that entail effecting our own behavior, not directly effecting theirs. A boycott for example would be legitimate, and might very well produce change. However a blockade for example would not be legitimate.
So...what exactly is your problem then? Has somebody here suggested action above and beyond economic sanction or political consequence as a result of of FGM or similar?
Well... Isn't your stated solution that we should try to change the other culture right up until they "win" and then you love their alternative?
No.
What I have been saying since the first post is that we should
recognize that cultures do try to influence each other, just as gov'ts try to change their citizens.
And that many nations make up a community of nations. As a person I limit my social consequences and allow the government to be responsible for some of them. The government here limits its social consequences amongst the community of nations.
As far as nuking others go, that acts as a reductio for your position not mine. That would involve frying other nations, right?
Only if you don't understand my position. I explained why it isn't a problem for my position...any country that wants to nuke us should have their culture changed so that they don't want to nuke us when they get hold of nukes. I don't think we should try and preserve a nuke-happy culture.
No, because severity of the practice is a culturally relative thing. The limits are based on what we would not want other nations to do to us, period.
Right - and I wouldn't want people going to war with us over Brit-pop but I could understand them going to war with us over torturing women. However, if they don't want to buy Brit-pop CDS that's fine as a social consequence. The limits are defined by us, but that doesn't mean we can't do anything
While my OP mentioned this stemming from a debate with one specific poster, it was not Nator, nor did I claim that anyone said we should Nuke or go to war as a first option. I have used examples of warfare to start finding the lines that we would draw on activity, because the original statements tended to be without them. In other words it was the lack of limitations, plus a mandate. I am questioning both.
I haven't seen any lack of limitations. Could you show me this 'lack'? I thought international law was pretty much a 'document' of limitations on what consequences are acceptable and what are not.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 84 by Silent H, posted 11-20-2007 6:52 PM Silent H has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 116 by Silent H, posted 11-21-2007 3:13 PM Modulous has replied

  
Modulous
Member
Posts: 7801
From: Manchester, UK
Joined: 05-01-2005


Message 123 of 270 (435578)
11-21-2007 5:54 PM
Reply to: Message 116 by Silent H
11-21-2007 3:13 PM


Okay, I don't want to accuse you of playing dumb, but I don't understand how you don't understand people within nations directly influence each other's cultures (or sub-cultures if that makes it easier) through legislative force?
Yes, legislative force is one way. Social pressure is another. Sometimes the two work together.
When you start appealing to what nations agree between each other, then that is not inherently your DIRECTLY effecting another culture in another nation. That would only be the case, if you enlist your gov't to force a change within another nation.
Obviously at the nation level I am not directly affecting the actions of my government - this is not a direct democracy. I can only indirectly influence these things. I'm not sure why you felt the need to say that - but I've not denied this.
If you cannot understand that people without voting rights in their own country do not have an EQUAL say in their culture, and may have NO say in the fate of their culture, then I'm not sure what to say.
Of course I understand that. That was my point. If it missed your point, why did you bring voting up?
See it's comments like that which really make me thing you're just trying to joke around.
Yes, that comment was tongue in cheek.
Yes things change in relation to each other, that does not make them a single community with inherent beliefs/codes applicable to all.
Well of course it doesn't. Wolves, being enormously different from humans, fail as a useful analogy. If an American wolf believed that infanticide is the wrong way to control populations, he might enact social consequences (refusing to share kills) against German wolves who think it is the best way. The Germans might do likewise. If one of the two groups decides to force the issue, a lupine war might break out.
Since Wolves don't have complex communications, interlupinal trade or lots of international migration...I don't see what you are trying to say with your analogy.
And your argument sort of defies the concept that was getting built around human rights anyway... was it our shared humanness or the reality that people change through interaction?
You can have both a recognition of shared humanity and accept that there are still differences, and some differences will not change, some will and some differences will vanish. Sometimes new differences emerge.
Now THAT is a more relevant question (in a practical sense). But I guess I'll have to turn it around to everyone else claiming that cultural practices should be ended if they violate current concepts of human rights. What is on the table?
What is on the table depends on the circumstances. If the human rights violations are severe enough, warfare may well be on the table. Warfare might well not be the best solution - and often it isn't. I don't see any value in going to war based on the practice of FGM, but I do see there might be value in going to war to end a culture of genocide.
When there are statements like the enforcement of human rights is more important than cultural diversity or national sovereignty, then I suppose it seems to me more than boycotts and argumentation are on the table.
Why make that assumption? Enforcement of human rights is more important than keeping certain cultural practices - but if a solution is proposed that will cause more suffering than the cultural practices...then it should be rejected.
Yeah, but you also said you embraced the idea that you could fail and have the other guys win out. That is where I am suggesting there might be a problem. What if these nukers win out... are you then going to embrace it?
I imagine given the scenario - I'd be dead. I would embrace it in the spirit I originally made the embracing statement. It's part of being alive and it's terrible and frightening but also wonderful. That doesn't mean I will be happy with the specific situation, or that I wouldn't be motivated to try and change it.
This is another interesting point. However, doesn't this suggest you ARE in favor of dropping limits on forms of coercion between nations, when it suits your cultural understandings?
No, I do not favour dropping limits on forms of coercion. It means I favour having limits, and accepting that they work both ways.
Frankly I would not see reason to go to war in either case. In both, it is a society inflicting damage on itself.
If you don't see a reason to go to war that is fine. However, the society isn't inflicting damage on itself (in either case), but on other human beings.
Again, people with their documents. As it is yes I can show you this "lack". The coalition of the willing invaded a nation in violation of "documents" all had signed restricting them from unilateral invasion, without direct threat to themselves.
It is roundly agreed that this was against international law regarding warfare, and has led to many violations of agreed to "human rights". That is not to mention those committed in the name of the war on terror in general... for example the ending of habeas corpus, and beginning of relatively unrestricted torture.
Sure - some governments ignore those limits when they feel they can, and I am against them for doing so and feel the international community should stop being pussies and politically punish Britain and America for being such gigantic dicks. Maybe they are doing, but it is hardly a big public punishment.
n all cases this was done with the idea that human rights impelled us to act in the way we did, in violation of these previous limits.
That might be the reason they are giving now, but the reason they gave then was that Iraq posed an imminent threat and as such the limits were different than if the act was humanitarian in nature.

This message is a reply to:
 Message 116 by Silent H, posted 11-21-2007 3:13 PM Silent H has not replied

  
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