Seven Fatal Flaws Of Relativism
Greg Koukl is a Christian apologist, radio talk show host, author and blogger in Los Angeles, California. He is the founder of Stand To Reason, a Christian evangelical organization dedicated to the articulation and defense of the Christian worldview. Koukl is known for his defenses of various doctrines of Christianity and he is also an outspoken critic of moral and philosophical relativism. He is an Old Earth Creationist, drawing evidence of his position from both science and scripture. He currently broadcasts his call-in radio show Stand To Reason out of KBRT AM-740, transmitting from Avalon, CA. Koukle holds a B.A. in Biblical Studies (May, 1977) Azusa Pacific University, an M.A. in Apologetics, with honors (May, 1994) at Simon Greenleaf University, and an M.A. in Philosophy of Religion and Ethics at Talbot School of Theology.
Seven Fatal Flaws of Moral Relativism
Moral relativism is a type of subjectivism which holds that moral truths are preferences much like our tastes in ice-cream. Moral relativism teaches that when it comes to morals, that which is ethically right or wrong, people can and should do what ever feels right for them. Ethical truths depend on the individuals, groups and cultures who hold them. Because they believe that ethical truth is subjective, the words ought and should are meaningless because everybody’s morality is equal; no one has a claim to an objective morality that is incumbent on others. Relativism does not require a particular standard of behaviour for every person in similar moral situations. When faced with exactly the same ethical situation, one person may choose one response while another may choose the opposite. No universal rules of conduct apply to everyone.
Flaw 1
Moral relativists can’t accuse others of wrongdoing. Relativism makes it impossible to criticize the behaviour of others, because relativism ultimately denies such a thing a ‘wrongdoing’. If one believes that morality is a matter of personal definition, then you surrender the possibility of making objective moral judgments about the actions of others, no matter how offensive they are to your intuitive sense of right or wrong. This means that a relativist cannot rationally object to murder, rape, child abuse, racism, sexism or environmental destruction if those actions are consistent with the perpetrator’s personal moral understanding of what is right and good. When right and wrong are a matter of personal choice, we surrender the privilege of making moral judgments about the actions of others. However if we are certain that some things must be wrong and that some judgments against another’s conduct are justified - then relativism is false.
Flaw 2
Relativists can’t complain about the problem of evil. The reality of evil in the world is one of the first objections raised against the existence of God. This entire objection hinges on the observation that true evil exists. Objective evil cannot exist if moral values are relative to the observer. Relativism is inconsistent with the concept that true moral evil exists because it denies that anything can be objectively wrong. If there is no moral standard, then there can be no departure from the standard. Thus relativists must surrender the concept of true evil and, ironically, must also surrender the problem of evil as an argument against the existence of God.
Flaw 3
Relativists can’t place blame or accept praise. Relativism renders the concepts of praise and blame meaningless, because no external standard of measurement defines what should be applauded or condemned. Without absolutes, nothing is ultimately bad, deplorable, tragic or worthy of blame. Neither is anything ultimately good, honourable, noble or worthy of praise. Relativists are almost always inconsistent here, because they seek to avoid blame, but readily accept praise. Since morality is a fiction, so too relativists must remove the words praise and blame from their vocabularies. If the notions of praise and blame are valid, then relativism is false.
Flaw 4
Relativists can’t make charges of unfairness or injustice. Under relativism, the notions of fairness and justice are incoherent as both concepts dictate that people should receive equal treatment based on some agreed external standard. However relativism does away with any notion of external binding standards. Justice entails punishing those who are guilty of a misdemeanour. But under relativism, guilt and blame do not exist - if nothing is ultimately immoral, there is no blame and therefore no guilt worthy of punishment. If relativism is true, then there is no such thing as justice or fairness because both concepts depend on an objective standard of what is right. If the notions of justice and fairness make sense, then relativism is defeated.
Flaw 5
Relativists can’t improve their morality. Relativists can change their personal ethics, but they can never become better people. Under relativism, one’s ethics can never become more ‘moral’. Ethics and morals can change, but they can never improve, as there is no objective standard to improve against. If, however, moral improvement seems to be a concept that makes sense, then relativism is false.
Flaw 6
Relativists can’t hold meaningful moral discussions. What’s there to talk about? If morals are entirely relative and all views are equal, then no way of thinking is better than another. No moral position can be judged as adequate or deficient, unreasonable, acceptable, or even barbaric. If ethical disputes make sense only when morals are objective, then relativism can only be consistently lived out in silence. For this reason, it is rare to meet a rational and consistent relativist, as most are quick to impose their own moral rules like “It’s wrong to push your own morality on others”. This puts relativists in an untenable position - if they speak up about moral issues, they surrender their relativism; if they do not speak up, they surrender their humanity. If the notion of moral discourse makes sense intuitively, then moral relativism is false.
Flaw 7
Relativists can’t promote the obligation of tolerance. The relativist’s moral obligation to be tolerant is self-refuting. Ironically the principle of tolerance is considered one of the key virtues of relativism. Morals are individual, so they say, and therefore we ought to tolerate the viewpoints of others and not pass judgment on their behaviour and attitudes. However, if there are no objective moral rules, there can be no rule that requires tolerance as a moral principle that applies equally to all. In fact, if there are no moral absolutes, why be tolerant at all? Relativists violate their own principle of tolerance when they fail to tolerate the views of those who believe in moral objective standards. They are, therefore, just as intolerant as they frequently charge the moral objectivist of being. The principle of tolerance is foreign to relativism. If, however, tolerance seems to be a virtue, then relativism is false.
The Bankruptcy of Relativism
Moral relativism is bankrupt. It is not a true moral system. It is self-refuting. It is hypocritical. It is logically inconsistent and irrational. It is seriously undermined by simple practical examples. It makes morality unintelligible. It is not even tolerant! The principle of tolerance makes sense only in a world in which moral absolutes exist, and only if one of those absolute standards for conduct is “All people should respect the rights of others to differ in conduct or opinion”. The ethic of tolerance can be rational only if moral truth is objective and absolute, not subjective and relative. Tolerance is a principle at home in moral absolutism and is irrational from any perspective of ethical relativism.
People are drowning in a sea of moral relativism. Relativism destroys the conscience. It produces people without scruples, because it provides no moral impulse to improve. This is why we don’t teach relativism to our children - in fact, we labour to teach them just the opposite. Ultimately, relativism is self-centred, egoistic and hypocritical. “Doing our own thing” is fine for us, but we don’t want others to be relativists. We expect them to treat us according to an accepted moral standard.
“I have freed Germany from the stupid and degrading fallacies of conscience and morality… We will train young people before whom the world will tremble.” Adolf Hitler
Moral relativism, in a practical sense, is completely unliveable. What kind of world would it be if relativism was true? It would be a world in which nothing was wrong - nothing is considered evil or good, nothing worthy or praise or blame. It would be a world in which justice and fairness are meaningless concepts, in which there would be no accountability, no possibility of moral improvement, no moral discourse. And it would be a world in which there is no tolerance. Moral relativism produces this kind of world.
The late Dr Francis Schaeffer’s remark could well apply to moral relativists, who “…have both feet firmly planted in mid-air.”
[Adapted from Beckwith, F. & Koukl G (2002), Relativism - Feet Firmly Planted in Mid-Air, Baker Books.]


smijer
on May 10th, 2009
One of the enigmas we live with as humans is the philosophical problem of morality. It’s all well and good to cast stones at moral relativism for its difficulties in grounding. But it’s disingenuous to assume that objectivism or absolutism are free from similar difficulties (Euthyphro’s dilemma is a start - will objective morality be a property of existence which God’s goodness ultimately reflects - such that God’s will is moot, or will it be defined by whatever God wills, such that God could will rape and murder to be good, thus making it arbitrary? - Similar difficulties exist for the secular objectivist) . Better minds than mine have struggled with these same issues, and even in the year 2009 there is no completely satisfying moral epistemology that doesn’t suffer from some variety of problems. Relativism is one flawed approach among many. Ultimately we have to live with the one objective truth - that we feel moral demands and we respond to them - and we may not be able to ground any of it better than that.
rogermorris
on May 10th, 2009
Morality is not a philosophical problem at all for the Christian theist. I agree with you that all of us intuitively feel the weight of conscience and the moral demands that underpin it. The Christian has no dilemma about where to ground these objective moral values - we ground them in the good and perfect nature of the triune God. Unfortunately for the atheist, Euthyphro’s so-called ‘dilemma’ is actually an easily refutable ‘false’ dilemma. There are not two options in this question, but three.
The Christian rejects the first option, that morality is an arbitrary function of God’s power. And he rejects the second option, that God is responsible to a higher law. There is no Law over God.
The third option is that an objective standard exists (this avoids the first horn of the dilemma). However, the standard is not external to God, but internal (avoiding the second horn). Morality is grounded in the immutable character of God, who is perfectly good. His commands are not whims, but rooted in His holiness. So the Christian answer avoids the dilemma entirely. Morality is not anterior to God–logically prior to Him–as Bertrand Russell suggests, but rooted in His nature.
For a more detailed study of this, I suggest you go to http://www.str.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=5236
So smijer, the atheist and the relativist have an indoluble problem with morality, whereas for the Christian the answer is quite clear and rational. Christian theism provides the ‘best fit’ solution to this dilemma, as it does for every other.
smijer
on May 10th, 2009
Roger, I’ll take some time to put together my thoughts on this subject, but I will post them at my home blog when I’m done. If you are interested in reading further, it will be there by tomorrow morning.
rogermorris
on May 11th, 2009
No problem smijer. Send me the link to your blog and I’m happy to have a read.
smijer
on May 11th, 2009
Well, then here you go.
rogermorris
on May 14th, 2009
Hello again Jerry,
I’ve now had a chance to read through your detailed response ‘Euthyphro’s Lament’, posted on your blog (http://tete-tete-tete.com/2009/05/euthyphros-lament/). I must say that your discussion was rhetorically very impressive and read superficially as a quite technically sophisticated piece of work. I certainly had to read it carefully through a number of times in an attempt to distill out of it the pertinent points. I got it down to two relevant points and will address the second first up.
You musings over ‘What is Good’ is covered quite well by Greg Koukl in his discussions about Euthyphro’s Dilemma. I quote Koukl directly:
“What is “good”? It doesn’t help to say that God is good unless we know what the term refers to. If the word “good” means “in accord with the nature and character of God,” we have a problem. When the Bible says “God is good,” it simply means “God has the nature and character that God has.” If God and goodness are the very same thing, then the statement “God is good” means nothing more than “God is God,” a useless tautology.
The answer to this problem hinges on the philosophical notion of identity, expressed symbolically as A = A. When one thing is identical to another (in the way I’m using the term), there are not two things, but one. Everything that’s true of the one is true of the other. They are not two, but one.
According to Christian teaching, God is not good in the same way that a bachelor is an unmarried male. When we say God is good, we are giving additional information, namely that God has a certain quality. God is not the very same thing as goodness (identical to it). It’s an essential characteristic of God, so there is no tautology.
A proper understanding of Christian teaching on God removes one problem, yet we still face another: What is “good”? How can we know goodness if we don’t define it first?
The answer is through moral intuition. Even the atheist intuitively understands what moral terms mean. This is precisely why the moral argument for God’s existence is such a good one. The awareness of morality leads to God much as the awareness of falling apples leads to gravity. Our moral intuitions recognize the effect, but what is the adequate cause? If God does not exist, then moral terms are actually incoherent and our moral intuitions are nonsense.
When Euthyphro’s dilemma is applied to Christianity, it mischaracterizes the Biblical view of God. Goodness is neither above God nor merely willed by Him. Instead, ethics are grounded in His holy character. Moral notions are not arbitrary and given to caprice. They are fixed and absolute, grounded in God’s immutable nature. Further, no outside definition of piety is necessary because morality is known directly through the faculty of moral intuition. God’s laws express His character and–if our moral intuitions are intact–we immediately recognize those Laws as good. This doesn’t mean Christianity is true, only that it’s is not handicapped by Plato’s challenge to Euthyphro. ”
With regards to the first major point you make, you admit that moral relativism has many aspects that we would intuitively find disappointing and dissatisfying, but that this didn’t necessarily make relativism untrue. What makes relativism untrue in that it is, in practical terms, unliveable and unworkable in it’s pure intellectual form. I don’t live as a moral relativist and I expect neither do you, at least in matters that involve your own personal rights and comforts. In your piece, you have given a fine example of intellectual rhetoric supporting the notion of relativism, one that conveniently allows you to continue to sidestep you own personal moral intuitions ( the their metaphysical ramifications to your atheism), but in practical terms relativism fails what Mark P. Cosgrove calls ‘The Test of Existential Repugnance’. That is it is impossible to live our one’s existence as a pure, consistent moral relativist. Somewhere along the line, every person’s moral intuition bubbles to the surface and betrays their highly theoretical and intellectual assent to relativism.
This is another fine example of how atheists use overly intellectual philosophical argumentation to desperately suppress their own deep inherent intuitions, in much the same way a the Dutch boy desperately jamming his finger in the leaking dyke.
Further Debate on Moral Philosophy | FaithInterface
on May 15th, 2009
[...] looks like I finally discovered how to comment on this thing! God’s Omnipotence: I… by TimeforteaHello again Jerry, I’ve now had a chance to read through your detailed response ‘Euthyphro’s… by rogermorrisSmijer, you use a lot of words and I want to read all of them and let them seep [...]