And the related question: is it racist to believe one's values are better than others'? — darthbarracuda
Why did so much of this start in Europe? — darthbarracuda
"I prefer Western values" might be seen as "I prefer white male values", — darthbarracuda
is it racist to believe one's values are better than others'? For example, is it racist to only study historical white philosophers who lived in Europe? — darthbarracuda
I think most of us would agree that things like equality, liberty and freedom are important values to be honored and promoted in society. — darthbarracuda
The short answer: yes. All values must be judged by reason, and to accept one over another simply because it is of the culture that one has sprung from, is unreasonable prejudice. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, the people to the far east of Europe are entitled to think their own cultures (China, SE Asia, Japan, Korea, Tibet, etc) are very fine too, world class, and second to none. Africans and Amerindians are going to think their cultures are very fine as well. — Bitter Crank
When students learn philosophy, they overwhelmingly learn the "Western tradition" — darthbarracuda
If we see our values as superior to other values, the question inevitably crops up: what causes this? Why did so much of this start in Europe? — darthbarracuda
Anything of value is ours, and anything despicable is foreign; that is racism. — unenlightened
Nope. That's just a version of nationalism. It's not the same. My nation can be multi-ethnic, in which case it would not be racist. It's the nation and culture that is relevant, not the race of the people(s) who make up the nation or culture.The short answer: yes. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, it's not racist. Even if it were "unreasonable prejudice", unreasonable prejudice is not racism. Racism is about races not values. — Baden
It's just a category error to say that if you think one set of values superior to another set that necessarily makes you racist. — Baden
Racist has to do with race, not with nation or culture. — Agustino
Sure, still not racism. That would be xenophobia at most.But according to my post, I refer to a certain form of unreasonable prejudice, one which places the values of one's own culture as higher than another's. — Metaphysician Undercover
:s lolAnd culture is an aspect of race. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course, you can. Take America. America is a multi-ethnic and multi-cultural nation and culture.If you can separate culture from race, such that culture is not an aspect of race, then you might have an argument here. — Metaphysician Undercover
And culture is an aspect of race. — Metaphysician Undercover
Thinking of foreigners as degenerate is xenophobic and prejudiced, which is bad enough, but not necessarily racist unless the reason has something to do with racial differences. — Baden
So what? Philosophers in the West have generally been white males. Surprisingly, philosophers in China have generally been Asian males. Philosophers in India have almost always been Indian males. Odd how that worked out. — Bitter Crank
It's not about whose values are 'better'. It's about how important my values are to me. — andrewk
Edit: making the link between this post and the OP more explicit. Looking at history gives a continual process from 'non-white' values to 'white values', the idea that the distinction exists is ahistorical. This isn't to say that there aren't variations in morals and ethics with respect to countries, just that the amalgamate of Western values aren't at root, Western, and the West as an ideological construct is part of a whitewashing of history. — fdrake
Interesting, yes. It is as if all the privileged white males get all the respect and honor and attention when there was a ton of work being done by unprivileged, non-white, and non-male people in the background. It is "whitewashed". And it does seem to be racist to continue to act as though it's not this way. — darthbarracuda
Not just equality, liberty, and freedom, but things like science and philosophy are overwhelmingly Western — darthbarracuda
It is relativism: Meta-ethical Moral Relativism, to be precise. What the rationale does is provide a robust, compelling reason for not drifting into Normative Moral Relativism, which is the state of being unprepared to impose one's moral convictions on others.I don't think I can look at things like this, seems to run into relativism. Why are these values more important to you? Are you implying there's nothing wrong with systematic oppression, death penalties, capitalism, etc? — darthbarracuda
America is a multi-ethnic and multi-cultural nation and culture. — Agustino
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