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February 2003

A mild & harmless relativism?

by Scott Campbell

Extreme relativism probably isn’t explicitly accepted by even the most scatterbrained of postmodernists or sociologists of science. Most postmodern views certainly lead to extreme relativism, and in some cases amount to little more than extreme relativism expressed in the most indirect and pretentious manner possible, but postmodernists do their best to hide these facts from themselves and will rarely admit to any such view when pressed, at least in public. But plenty of people, postmodern or otherwise, would profess to accept some sort of mild, limited relativism. What’s more, such views are no longer restricted to disgruntled left-wingers who are overly susceptible to the latest intellectual fashions. Plenty of sober, considered, and conservative thinkers now think of themselves as accepting some form of limited relativism.

A typical example of this phenomenon appeared in the pages of Australia’s bastion of serious conservativ ...

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Scott Campbell is a lecturer in philosophy at the University of Nottingham, New Zealand
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 21 February 2003, on page 30
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