No morality is obligatory so I have no idea why you keep bringing it up? What makes it "right" is that it is the best method for allowing your society and therefore yourself to survive and thrive. It has the best positive outcome.
RDM, seriously this gets worse. Does moral experience seriously not tell you that rape is wrong and you ought not to do it?
I would say that limiting harm done is a "good" thing but this is different from saying it is "right". When I talk about moral values I am talking about whether something is good or bad. Moral duty is whether something is right or wrong and whether I ought or ought not to do something. Just because a given act is good doesn't mean I'm morally obligated to it.
Here's an example... it may be a good thing to become a medic as it will help so many people, however, I am in no way morally obligated to become a medic.
It isn't that it confuses me I just see it as irrelevant. Arguing about if an objective morality that we cannot know exists is somewhat pointless. In practice your so-called objective morality is just as subjective as the one you decry.
Let's give you my definition again to help clarify this. To say that there are objective moral values is to say that something is good or bad no matter what anyone thinks about it.
Given this definition, don't you agree that harm done is objectively bad?
What is plausible about it? Do you find all other religions to be as plausible as your own? It seems to be a certain hubris that we are special enough
that a divine being has decided we have a special set of rules we need to comply with. Especially when he decides to obfuscate what those special rules are. God seems to be little more than a conceit.
If there is no moral law giver, then there is no objective moral law that we must obey. If God doesn't exist why think that we have any moral worth at all?
After all, on atheism moral values are just the by-product of evolution and social conditioning. I don't see anything about this evolved morality that makes it objectively true.
Additionally, on atheism we are just animals, and animals have no moral obligations to each other.
Following from that, why think that human flourishing is more valuable that the flourishing of any other animal?
I don't believe morality is obfuscated at all. Does your own moral experience not tell you that some things are objectively good or bad, right or wrong?
I shall say again that I am agnostic on the dea of objective morality and it would depend on the specific definition of objective morality too. Yours seems to be specifically structured to require a God for example.
"To say that there are objective moral values is to say that something is good or bad no matter what anyone thinks about it."
Given that definition, do you not agree that objective moral values do exist? That statement doesn't mention God at all.
So none has mentioned an objective morality based on harm? Because I could swear that it has been mentioned a dozen times or so. That you disagree with it or find it implausible I could believe but that you haven't heard it at all seems to be a significant feat of selective reasoning.
If atheism were true why would harm done be wrong?
Because harm means a less successful society and less chance of it flourishing and therefore the individual.
Again, on athiesm why would the flourishing of humans even be valuable compared to the flourishing of any other animal?
It isn't confusion, it is irrelevance. Is there a god given objective morality? No one can know. If we can't know then it is pretty much irrelevant so we then need to look at the practical implications. The practical implications that if god given objective morality exists then it is unknowable and so we
have to subjectively implement it, making it no different from any other morality.
Don't you agree that in moral experience we apprehend objective values and duties? I'd like to think that most people recognise that certain actions are really wrong.
Ringo, you seem to believe that belief in a deity is required for sustainable morality?
Surely that is not true morality as such people are effectively scared into following moral values.
Surely by such a sentiment, all atheists must be psychopathic axe murderers?
Societal values are imprinted on young, this does not require any higher function than a parent imposing values on a child.
Crinkleshoes, I am not suggesting that at all. You don't need to believe in a deity to be a decent person who does good/right things. God is only mentioned as the basis for objective moral values and duties.