The big idea: Travel far enough and everything looks different — food, dress, manners, beliefs. So is there anything at all that shows up in every human culture? If yes, that's strong evidence for a shared nature. If no, maybe 'human nature' is a myth.
A human universal is a trait present everywhere. Its rival is cultural relativism — the idea that customs vary so much that nothing is fixed across all people.
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Look past the surface differences and some patterns keep repeating.
What seems to turn up everywhere: Anthropologists who compare hundreds of cultures find striking repeats: language, some form of family, music and dance, telling right from wrong, fear of death, jokes and laughter, and marking birth and death with ritual. Different in detail — the same in outline. That pattern is the best evidence that we share a nature.
Checkpoint — universals: In one line: the same outlines (language, family, morality) show up everywhere, so something must be built in. Now the challenge from the other direction.
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The rival view says the differences run deeper than the similarities.
How far customs really differ: What one culture calls polite, another calls insulting. What counts as a crime, a family, a fair share, even a normal emotion, shifts dramatically from place to place. The cultural relativist says: since values vary this much, there is no single 'human nature' telling everyone how to live.
Universals win
- Strength: the same outlines really do repeat everywhere
- Strength: explains why we can understand distant cultures at all
- Weakness: each 'universal' looks very different up close
Variation wins
- Strength: values and customs differ dramatically
- Strength: warns us against calling our own ways 'natural'
- Weakness: if all values are relative, we can't condemn ANY cruelty
Go further — higher-level insight: The strongest position splits the difference: the outlines are universal (every culture has language, family, morality) while the content is local (which language, which rules). That lets you keep a shared human nature AND take cultural difference seriously — and it dodges the trap where 'all values are relative' means no cruelty can ever be criticised.