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The argument that concepts like "universal human rights," "objective science," or "global reason" are not truths we discovered, but powerful, persuasive stories we built. It's the attempt to construct a single, all-encompassing framework that applies to everyone, everywhere, as a deliberate project against the fragmenting effect of relativism. While it claims to speak for a "common humanity," its definitions (What is a "right"? What counts as "reason"?) are inevitably shaped by the cultural and historical context of its builders, often being the winning ideology that gets to dress its local values in the robes of the universal.
Example: "The UN Declaration of Human Rights is a triumph of the Theory of Constructed Universalism. Delegates from diverse worldviews argued, compromised, and built a shared story about human dignity that now feels self-evident. But its construction is clear: it prioritizes individual liberty in a way some communitarian cultures find foreign. It's not a law of nature; it's a brilliant, fragile, and profoundly influential piece of global legal architecture we all agree to maintain."
by Abzu Land January 31, 2026
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