Scorekeeping Thick Ethical Concepts: an Investigation of Cross-cultural Moral Disagreement and Relativism - Xianduan Shi Ph.d. - Books - LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing - 9783844314007 - July 1, 2011
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Scorekeeping Thick Ethical Concepts: an Investigation of Cross-cultural Moral Disagreement and Relativism

Xianduan Shi Ph.d.

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Scorekeeping Thick Ethical Concepts: an Investigation of Cross-cultural Moral Disagreement and Relativism

In the 1980s, Bernard Williams made a number of plausible observations about thick ethical concepts, but without explaining why they work the way he believed. This book develops a collective version of David Lewis?s conversational scorekeeping model, and demonstrates how scorekeeping can control the contents of thick ethical concepts. It provides analysis of a widely remarked phenomenon, that people from different cultures apply incongruent thick ethical concepts. The model offers a new stance that relativism of distance dissipates when one masters another culture?s scoreboard, suggesting that there are at least four maturity levels corresponding to four types of relativistic attitudes: in absolutism, a self-righteous attitude; in vulgar relativism, an ecumenical attitude; in relativism of distance, a disengaged attitude; and in mature assessment, a responsible attitude. The scoreboard theory is then examined in the context of China?s one-child policy. Shi suggests that understanding public policy through thick and thin ethical concepts is a new and effective approach to cross-cultural dialogue, and recommends that people learn the scoring histories of different cultures.

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released July 1, 2011
ISBN13 9783844314007
Publishers LAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
Pages 160
Dimensions 150 × 9 × 226 mm   ·   244 g
Language English