Morality: The Mirage of Subjectivity Within a Relative Framework

Morality, that ever-elusive beacon of human conduct, is often treated as an immutable entity—a granite monolith dictating the terms of right and wrong. Yet, upon closer inspection, morality reveals itself to be a mirage: a construct contingent upon cultural frameworks, historical conditions, and individual subjectivity. It is neither absolute nor universal but, rather, relative and ultimately subjective, lacking any intrinsic meaning outside of the context that gives it shape.

Audio: Spotify podcast conversation about this topic.

Nietzsche: Beyond Good and Evil, Beyond Absolutes

Friedrich Nietzsche, in his polemical Beyond Good and Evil and On the Genealogy of Morality, exposes the illusion of objective morality. For Nietzsche, moral systems are inherently the products of human fabrication—tools of power masquerading as eternal truths. He describes two primary moralities: master morality and slave morality. Master morality, derived from the strong, values power, creativity, and self-affirmation. Slave morality, by contrast, is reactive, rooted in the resentment (ressentiment) of the weak, who redefine strength as “evil” and weakness as “good.”

Nietzsche’s critique dismantles the notion that morality exists independently of cultural, historical, or power dynamics. What is “moral” for one era or society may be utterly abhorrent to another. Consider the glorification of war and conquest in ancient Sparta versus the modern valorisation of equality and human rights. Each framework exalts its own virtues not because they are universally true but because they serve the prevailing cultural and existential needs of their time.

The Myth of Monolithic Morality

Even viewed through a relativistic lens—and despite the protestations of Immanuel Kant or Jordan Peterson—morality is not and has never been monolithic. The belief in a singular, unchanging moral order is, at best, a Pollyanna myth or wishful thinking, perpetuated by those who prefer their moral compass untroubled by nuance. History is not the story of one moral narrative, but of a multiplicity of subcultures and countercultures, each with its own moral orientation. These orientations, while judged by the dominant moral compass of the era, always resist and redefine what is acceptable and good.

If the tables are turned, so is the moral compass reoriented. The Man in the High Castle captures this truth chillingly. Had the Nazis won World War II, Americans—despite their lofty self-perceptions—would have quickly adopted the morality of their new rulers. The foundations of American morality would have been reimagined in the image of the Third Reich, not through inherent belief but through cultural osmosis, survival instincts, and institutionalised pressure. What we now consider abhorrent might have become, under those circumstances, morally unremarkable. Morality, in this view, is not timeless but endlessly pliable, bending to the will of power and circumstance.

The Case for Moral Objectivity: Kantian Ethics

In contrast to Nietzsche’s relativism, Immanuel Kant offers a vision of morality as rational, universal, and objective. Kant’s categorical imperative asserts that moral principles must be universally applicable, derived not from cultural or historical contingencies but from pure reason. For Kant, the moral law is intrinsic to rational beings and can be expressed as: “Act only according to that maxim whereby you can, at the same time, will that it should become a universal law.”

This framework provides a stark rebuttal to Nietzsche’s subjectivity. If morality is rooted in reason, then it transcends the whims of power dynamics or cultural specificity. Under Kant’s system, slavery, war, and exploitation are not morally permissible, regardless of historical acceptance or cultural norms, because they cannot be willed universally without contradiction. Kant’s moral absolutism thus offers a bulwark against the potential nihilism of Nietzschean subjectivity.

Cultural Pressure: The Birthplace of Moral Adoption

The individual’s adoption of morality is rarely a matter of pure, autonomous choice. Rather, it is shaped by the relentless pressures of culture. Michel Foucault’s analysis of disciplinary power in works such as Discipline and Punish highlights how societies engineer moral behaviours through surveillance, normalisation, and institutional reinforcement. From childhood, individuals are inculcated with the moral codes of their culture, internalising these norms until they appear natural and self-evident.

Yet this adoption is not passive. Even within the constraints of culture, individuals exercise agency, reshaping or rejecting the moral frameworks imposed upon them. Nietzsche’s Übermensch represents the apotheosis of this rebellion: a figure who transcends societal norms to create their own values, living authentically in the absence of universal moral truths. By contrast, Kantian ethics and utilitarianism might critique the Übermensch as solipsistic, untethered from the responsibilities of shared moral life.

Morality in a Shifting World

Morality’s subjectivity is its double-edged sword. While its flexibility allows adaptation to changing societal needs, it also exposes the fragility of moral consensus. Consider how modern societies have redefined morality over decades, from colonialism to civil rights, from gender roles to ecological responsibility. What was once moral is now abhorrent; what was once abhorrent is now a moral imperative. Yet even as society evolves, its subcultures and countercultures continue to resist and reshape dominant moral paradigms. If history teaches us anything, it is that morality is less a fixed star and more a flickering flame, always at the mercy of shifting winds.

Conclusion: The Artifice of Moral Meaning

Morality, then, is not a universal truth etched into the fabric of existence but a subjective artifice, constructed by cultures to serve their needs and adopted by individuals under varying degrees of pressure. Nietzsche’s philosophy teaches us that morality, stripped of its pretensions, is not an arbiter of truth but a symptom of human striving—one more manifestation of the will to power. In contrast, Kantian ethics and utilitarianism offer structured visions of morality, but even these grapple with the tensions between universal principles and the messy realities of history and culture.

As The Man in the High Castle suggests, morality is a contingent, situational artefact, liable to be rewritten at the whim of those in power. Its apparent stability is an illusion, a construct that shifts with every epoch, every conquest, every revolution. To ignore this truth is to cling to a comforting, but ultimately deceptive, myth. Morality, like all human constructs, is both a triumph and a deception, forever relative, ever mutable, yet persistently contested by those who would impose an impossible order on its chaos.

6 thoughts on “Morality: The Mirage of Subjectivity Within a Relative Framework

  1. I think when you begin to reason from the view point of an explanatory framework rather than a descriptive ontology you reach the conclusions you have. Especially if social individualism is assumed or already in place. See for example doi.org/10.1007/s11229-023-04263-7 (‘A plea for descriptive social ontology’).

    Morality is such an important topic

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    1. Thanks. I get it, but from a post-structuralist view, I disagree with their assertion.. Whilst the article ostensibly rejects explanatory commitments, it ironically establishes its own meta-narrative: the primacy of descriptive ontology as the foundation of social research. The authors’ belief that description can establish ‘what needs to be explained’ assumes a stable epistemic foundation.

      The proposed binary distinction between description and explanation imposes a reductive framework on inherently complex and fluid social realities. The central argument of prioritising description over explanation relies on an assumption that description can be objective and untainted by interpretation. Language itself, as a medium of description, carries cultural, historical, and ideological baggage, embedding explanatory elements into even the simplest observations.

      The article’s framework is rooted in outdated epistemological assumptions that fail to account for the constructed and contested nature of knowledge. Rather than attempting to privilege description over explanation, a more productive approach would embrace reflexivity, acknowledging the entangled, power-laden, and interpretative nature of all social research. In this light, the purported distinction between description and explanation dissolves into a mosaic, where understanding arises not from methodological hierarchies but from embracing complexity and multiplicity.

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      1. You take a position contrary to Wittgenstein – he taught that explanations contain hidden prejudices that distort reality. I think this difference lies at the heart of the difference between cultures that have a transcendent being and those that are immanent – i.e. Occident and Orient. If you are born into a culture, even though you stopped believing in a transcendent god a long time ago – your thinking is shaped by it. “All explanation must disappear, and description must take its place”

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  2. I believe the distinction between explanation and description become wordplay. There is nothing to explain or describe without a cultural overlay, so it becomes a pointless distinction, arguing over the construct rather than the signified. Words only have meaning through difference, but they remain foundationless. As I said before, we could argue the meaning of these terms to infinity and beyond without resolution.

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  3. I take it that you are not a fan of Wittgenstein then. I see Wittgenstein’s argument that words have meaning thru use. Tell Wittgenstein’s culture of builders (in PI) that words remain foundationless – and not much building gets done.

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  4. Words do have meaning through use, and their meaning is everchanging and subjective despite the attempt to use them in a shared context. This realisation is at the heart of my Language Insufficiency Hypothesis and the Language Efficiency-Complexity Gradient I am developing. Words are like a Pointillist painting that looks beautiful from a distance but loses fidelity and definition upon scrutiny. It’s all held together by a cognitive system that fills in blanks by approximation, but meaning is never shared at a foundation level – not unless one accounts for error tolerance in the communication model. There is typically a lot more noise than signal that people realise or are willing to admit, so they manage to muddle through and adopt a sort of defeatist, pragmatic perspective on life and run with ‘good enough’.

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