In almost any country, you can find someone that holds
almost any view. Just think about all the people around you and how they differ
in their religious, political, philosophical, and ethical views. Think about how
they dress differently, have different taste in art, talk about different
things, eat different foods, and have different personalities. To me, all this
diversity within a culture is convincing evidence that existing within the same
culture does not determine beliefs and behavior.
At the same time, there are easy generalizations we can make
about cultures: what sports certain cultures are into, how much certain
cultures drink, what religion people in most cultures practice, what political
beliefs people in most cultures hold, what kind of clothes people in a given
culture count, etc. Obviously, culture influences beliefs and behaviour.
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In epistemological debates, the correlation between beliefs
and cultural norms is sometimes brought up as an excuse for skepticism of facts
and values. But given the variety of beliefs within a culture, this objection
strikes me as a red herring. What’s important isn’t that different cultures have different beliefs; it’s
that different people have different
beliefs. Bringing the debate to the scale of cultures adds nothing to the
argument: that a firm basis for beliefs is required to solve disagreements. The
level of epistemological panic one associates with the coexistence
of a Jew and a Christian living in the same culture should match the level of
epistemological panic one associates with the coexistence of a
culture of Jews and a culture of Christians.
Culture obviously influences beliefs but obviously does not determine
them. We should think of cultural influence as a strong probabilistic needle,
making it likely that certain people hold certain beliefs and behave in certain
ways. But the needle does not have a 100% rate of injection.
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