Civilization vs Culture

Dida

YHWH
Joined
Sep 11, 2003
Messages
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Is it true that there is no such distinction as civilized and uncivilized people, but only different culture? To what degree does an outlandish view deserve to be respected in the name of cultural difference?
 
I would say that there is such a thing as "civilized" and "uncivilized" - I also think that how civilized a culture is, is not a value judgment but a simple description of their degree of technological or social complexity relative to the average of that time period. Hence I have no problem describing a culture (ancient or modern) as uncivilized without feeling that I am insulting them.
 
Is it true that there is no such distinction as civilized and uncivilized people, but only different culture? To what degree does an outlandish view deserve to be respected in the name of cultural difference?
No, it's not true. Who believes in relative morality these days? Tolerance is important, and recognition of what is morally higher can be present while remaining tolerant.
 
There is better and worse, good and bad within and between cultures. The culture in which you were raised will certainly affect your ultimate judgment, but there are (or should be) cross-cultural universals and logic and rationalism can be applied to find them. They (logic/rationalism) can also be applied to determine beneficial or counter-productive, good or bad, and better or worse as well. This doesn't mean that everyone will reach the same conclusions in the same way, but a general consensus of fair minded, rational and intelligent people is possible.

I personally abhor relativism of almost every sort. Its excuses and encourages abuse and barbarity. There is not rational justification for institutionalized discrimination and bigotry if one wants to be considered a just and righteous society. 'Its their culture' is not an excuse for rampant repression and corruption. These are not the signs of a different culture. These are the signs of an inferior, and if it gets too extreme, a barbaric culture.

Free expression, civil rights, general equality under the law, the establishment and codification of laws, representative government, etc are superior cultural values to their direct alternatives.
 
I personally abhor relativism of almost every sort. Its excuses and encourages abuse and barbarity. There is not rational justification for institutionalized discrimination and bigotry if one wants to be considered a just and righteous society. 'Its their culture' is not an excuse for rampant repression and corruption. These are not the signs of a different culture. These are the signs of an inferior, and if it gets too extreme, a barbaric culture.
There is a problem somewhere...
 
I would say that there is such a thing as "civilized" and "uncivilized" - I also think that how civilized a culture is, is not a value judgment but a simple description of their degree of technological or social complexity relative to the average of that time period. Hence I have no problem describing a culture (ancient or modern) as uncivilized without feeling that I am insulting them.

I'll sign that.
 
Is it true that there is no such distinction as civilized and uncivilized people, but only different culture? To what degree does an outlandish view deserve to be respected in the name of cultural difference?

Well, I think there's a lot of confusion about the term "civilization" or "civilized".

In the past, civilization was a term for

a) some kind of unversal civilization, in other words the opposite of primitive tribalism
b) a nation that has existed in the past (Egypt, Persia etc.)

Today, after Huntington, we see that there is more than just one civilization on this planet, but many large, culturally distinct groups of countries that are called civilizations (Western civilization, Islamic civilization, Hindu civilization etc.).

These civilizations are very different in some respects. IMHO the only way how to measure their success is to look at their economic, technological and military achievments. The civilization that is superior to others is obviously better.

And yes, there are still some uncivilized tribals out there.
 
Cultures are all heterogenous, it's perfectly legitimate to back one part of a culture against another (for example, anti-FGM campaigners in Africa as one more clear-cut example, also wishing for leftwards change in conservative countries). That's the path out of the "absolute relativism" trap without resorting to ethnocentric bigotry.
 
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