schopenhauer1
Leontiskos
At what point (if any) can we distill cultural factors for why groups act a certain way versus socio-economic or political factors? — schopenhauer1
Can one be a "culturist", meaning can one morally be "against" certain cultures, or should people be tolerant of all cultural aspects, whether you agree with them or not? — schopenhauer1
I rather have it an investigation on when one can reasonably blame a "cultural" trait, if at all for a negative aspect of social living. — schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1
What do you mean by culture? On my view economics and politics are downstream of culture, and so it is difficult to separate such things from culture. — Leontiskos
Leontiskos
I mean a classic example here is gang culture in the US. This is tied with so many things- racial oppression, socio-economic oppression, and cultural aspects. One side of the debate regarding gang culture is that it is a cultural problems. A prominent conservative historian, Thomas Sowell, traces it back to Southern white redneck culture, that ultimately gets traced back to England. Nonetheless, he seems to see it as more of a cultural circumstance more than socio-economic. Others would say that it derives from socio-economic circumstances of simply being poor. If you are poor, and discriminated, these are the activities that a subgroup might tend towards.. — schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1
For such a person—and they are common—I would ask why we must accept the premise that cultural realities cannot be criticized. — Leontiskos
Echarmion
At what point can we distill with more certainty cultural factors from others (geographic, socio-economic, individual psychological, etc.)? — schopenhauer1
Others would say that it derives from socio-economic circumstances of simply being poor. If you are poor, and discriminated, these are the activities that a subgroup might tend towards.. — schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1
The other approach is to conclude based on the behaviour of some sample. If you can distill a cultural practice from the sample, and that practice provides an explanation for the difference you're seeing, then that's evidence that culture is causing the difference. — Echarmion
The other is whether you can then clearly trace back the origins of the culture. The latter will often be immensely difficult, but is not necessary required to solve a problem. — Echarmion
Leontiskos
But it's also, WHEN can we distill that it is cultural vs. other factors? — schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1
For example, if gangs are a result of poverty, and if poverty is not a societal habit, then the poverty that produces gangs is not a cultural cause. — Leontiskos
The trick is that poverty can become cultural even when it is not at first. Probably everything is like this, which is what makes the question difficult. My guess is that an important distinction must be made between high culture and just culture. The Chinese have a tea culture and an opium culture. The first is "high culture" or intentional culture, whereas the second is just culture, or else undesirable culture. — Leontiskos
Tom Storm
schopenhauer1
Female circumcision in Muslim countries - is this an expression of their religion or their culture? Or both? Muslim apologists in the West will frequently argue that this phenomenon is not a part of Islam, but a cultural phenomenon. I wonder how easy it is to separate culture from religion. Is American evangelical Christianity a form of Christianity? Or is it an American cultural phenomenon? Or both - a religion reimagined through a cultural milieu. — Tom Storm
Culture is the collection of beliefs, values, and behaviors that a group of people share, such as a nation or religious group. It also includes the language, customs, and ideas about roles and relationships.
Leontiskos
For such a person—and they are common—I would ask why we must accept the premise that cultural realities cannot be criticized. — Leontiskos
This is essentially my question :D. [...it] is more of an axiological question — schopenhauer1
Ok, so how do you know which is attributed to which? Should it be condemned if it is cultural, or is culture sacrosanct? To what extent?
...
Let's say that culture was not at all in the picture, and you disapproved of someone's individual habit.. But then you realized that that habit was actually part of their culture. Does the disapproval change? If so, why? — schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1
This is essentially my question :D. [...it] is more of an axiological question
I tend to blame Rawls for this sort of cultural relativism. When you can't figure out how to ground morality objectively, then you just stop at the level of culture, and that's what Rawls did. — Leontiskos
For example, there is a moral difference between someone who freely engages in a bad act and someone who is addicted to it. — Leontiskos
And we must remember to distinguish between morality and custom in order to avoid condemning what is contrary to our own customs but not to morality. — Leontiskos
Leontiskos
So is culture akin to addiction in that it is a mechanism whereby free will is limited to an extent? — schopenhauer1
But can't certain cultural customs be immoral? — schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1
For Aristotle habit is the basis of both vice and virtue. — Leontiskos
AmadeusD
There are dozens of other examples where things get entangled. Let's say you have a subgroup that allows their kids to essentially run amok in a neighborhood.. They let 3 year olds run in the street, but that is part of their culture.. But let's say in the major culture it would be frowned upon to let a three year old run back and forth on a street. — schopenhauer1
BitconnectCarlos
A culture seems to be something one generally falls into, though one can take it on too. What if one is about virtue-building but isn't following any particular program, just their own.. Is that culture? — schopenhauer1
Can one be a "culturist", meaning can one morally be "against" certain cultures, or should people be tolerant of all cultural aspects — schopenhauer1
frank
schopenhauer1
This is the exact issue which is going to, likely, prevent any real multi-culturalism every working. We would need to be blaming hte other culture to support those positions. THe 'home' culture wins, on principle alone. But this doesn't have anything to say morally, if you want a reasoned position, as opposed to 'this makes sense to me culture'. And back we are to the first issue.. It just wont work. — AmadeusD
schopenhauer1
No, that's you reading and interpreting ideas. Culture is very real and it can really impact a person whether they "agree" to it or not. Culture to a large extent is impressed upon an individual not so with philosophy. — BitconnectCarlos
You can be against certain cultures, but there's certainly a logic to that culture that you need to be aware of. So usually just saying "I'm against X culture" sounds kind of stupid -- it's like the accuser isn't not engaging with the logic behind the cultural practice. — BitconnectCarlos
schopenhauer1
I think you can take any behavior and analyze it out for influences from the most poignantly personal all the way out to the nature of life.
One thing I remember from time to time is the comment from a friend who was listening to me explaining race relations. He said "You know you're just trying to understand yourself.". I was stunned, but I knew it was true. — frank
AmadeusD
Why would safety not be considered valuable for the sake of child/animal? — schopenhauer1
So in a way, the multiculturalism does persist, it is reconciled by geographic separation. — schopenhauer1
This starts getting muddled when things like "gentrification" happen and the old-subgroups and the new subgroups may clash a bit.. — schopenhauer1
BitconnectCarlos
I mean where is the dividing line. In some ways, religions can be seen as a philosophy, no? One can even enter a religious community rather than being born into one. — schopenhauer1
Sure, okay, a culture that say, perceives its land being stolen believes it has a right to get it back by any means necessary (terrorism).. There is a logic. I understand it. So? — schopenhauer1
frank
For the dominant group, it is more seemingly free willed — schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1
Because (and this really is the rub, to me) that culture either doesn't possess the concept, or rejects that account. There's no real argument if that's the case.. — AmadeusD
These seem to run up against each other? — AmadeusD
I think this precedes the geographical demarcation above. I think it works by initial acceptance, until this (the clash) occurs, and hten over time, either there's violent confrontation, or geographical separation. This, to me, is not multi-culturalism and it seems, to me, that its a bit of a red herring. We want cultural acceptance so we're not invading each other. I can't see much more than this being achievable cross-culturally. — AmadeusD
schopenhauer1
I agree that cultures can be wicked. But there is a logic behind it that can be explored. — BitconnectCarlos
schopenhauer1
Is it? Are they better at taking responsibility for their actions? — frank
Tom Storm
And we must remember to distinguish between morality and custom in order to avoid condemning what is contrary to our own customs but not to morality. — Leontiskos
When you can't figure out how to ground morality objectively, then you just stop at the level of culture, and that's what Rawls did. — Leontiskos
BitconnectCarlos
Right, well you made it seem by knowing the logic, the intolerance will go away. But what if knowing the logic makes no difference or even makes it worse? — schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1
The intolerance won't go away, but it will help us understand it. I do find learning the logic behind it interesting -- it helps us understand things like the depth of the wickedness and where its roots lie. And this leads us to ask: Were the roots themselves wicked or were they twisted by the culture? — BitconnectCarlos
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