Relativism
“Morality especially has come to seem to [Hamlet] completely
dependent on his own opinions. ‘There is nothing either good or bad but
thinking makes it so,’ he declares.
How wild was this? Shakespeare had predicted post-modernism
and moral relativism hundreds of years before they came into being! ...
But there was one big difference. Hamlet said these things
when he was pretending to be mad. My professors said them and pretended to be
sane. Shakespeare was telling us, it seemed to me, that relativism was not just
crazy, it was make-believe crazy, because even the people who proclaimed it did
not believe it deep down. If, after all, there is no truth, how could it be
true that there is no truth? If there is no absolute morality, how can you
condemn the morality of considering my culture better than another? Relativism
made no sense, as Shakespeare clearly saw.”
~Andrew Klavan (excerpt from: The Great Good Thing: A Secular
Jew Comes to Faith in Christ)
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