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Moral Relativism

Neil Levy

On September 11 2001, thousands of people died in the attacks on the United States. How could the terrorists justify these acts?

A young man kills his sister to protect his family’s honour. How could this be ‘right’

These are just some of the questions tackled by Neil Levy in an incisive and elegant guide to the philosophy of moral relativism – the idea that concepts of ‘rightness’ and ‘wrongness’ vary from culture to culture, and that there is no such thing as an absolute moral code. Opening with a comprehensive definition of this controversial theory, the book examines all the arguments for and against moral relativism, from its implications for ethics to the role of human biology and the difficulty of separating cultural values from innate behaviour

  • Publication date: October 1, 2014
  • ISBN: 9781780744544
  • RRP: £5.99
  • Pages: 256

Neil Levy

Neil Levy is a Fellow at the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics at the University of Melbourne in Australia. He is an expert on ethics and political philosophy and has lectured and published widely in this area. His current research takes him into the areas of bioethics, moral responsibility, and the ethics of new technologies. He is the author of Sartre (Oneworld, 2001) and Moral Relativism: A Short Introduction (Oneworld 2002).

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