Right, wrong, who cares? It's all relative, anyway ...
"Three quarters of all college seniors report that their professors teach them that what is right and wrong depends "on differences in individual values and cultural diversity," a poll conducted for the National Association of Scholars (NAS) reveals."
I wonder, if your prevailing philosophy is that right and wrong are relative, how you could teach a student anything without feeling like a bit of hypocrite? After all, whatever was being taught, might be right, might be wrong. And if it was wrong, then that means there must be absolute truth, but how could that be if truth is only relative? But if it's not wrong, then how can truth be relative, because the truth would have to ... ah, screw it.
"Three quarters of all college seniors report that their professors teach them that what is right and wrong depends "on differences in individual values and cultural diversity," a poll conducted for the National Association of Scholars (NAS) reveals."
I wonder, if your prevailing philosophy is that right and wrong are relative, how you could teach a student anything without feeling like a bit of hypocrite? After all, whatever was being taught, might be right, might be wrong. And if it was wrong, then that means there must be absolute truth, but how could that be if truth is only relative? But if it's not wrong, then how can truth be relative, because the truth would have to ... ah, screw it.

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