Towards a Common Universal Ethic: Putnam, Habermas, and Taha Abdurrahman

Volume 6|Issue 24| Spring 2018 |Articles

Abstract

​This paper explores three different ethical theories rooted in different cultures and determined by distinct intellectual systems. These models or approaches were put forward by Putnam, Habermas and Taha Abdurrahman, acknowledging the urgency of ethics for contemporary society. All of these approaches are keenly aware of both the cultural contexts which limit ethics in specific societies and also the need for universalist ethics. Insistent on both this universality as well as specificities pertaining to particular cultures, all of these authors emphasized the possibility of a universal ethics which could transcend—if not totally obliterate— these specificities.

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holds a doctorate in Communication Linguistics, and won second place in the Arab Award for Human and Social Sciences for unpublished research for 2017 from the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies in Doha. He has participated in several national and international conferences and is currently a professor of philosophy in Morocco.

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