MBF wrote:In the phrase "Objective morality", the word 'objective' is the greater fiction. That alone is enough to disqualify the concept.
We have 4 known forces in the universe, which is composed of 4% known matter and 96% dark matter/energy. There is no known 'moral' substance or energy in the universe. We have been studying nature and trying to the decipher its governing laws for centuries, and the most current representations of those laws contain nothing remotely moral, to my knowledge. To the contrary, they seem completely devoid of good/bad, right/wrong value judgements.
It is also devoid, by the "energy rules" of pain, pleasure, and any other feeling that needs a nervous system. Approaching living organisms with physics law, doesn't seem to be a very explanatory way.
MBF wrote:My current point of view (always subject to revision as new information is presented) is that morality is an emergent human-made value, and it depends upon human perception/cognition for its very existence, therefore it is by definition subjective. Whether or not it is also relative is probably the better question, and maybe what the OP was getting at in the first place. That it's also relative seems demonstrable by a quick survey of the variances in the legal systems of human societies throughout time and location.
A truly objective morality for humans would seem to require at least one higher-than-human sentient being that could decide upon and impose moral laws. I see no such evidence of such a being, leading me to assume that morality is manmade, and therefore subjective, and therefore relative.
The input of laws is misleading. Moral is not the same as ethics, or social order, and "objective", is obviously a misrepresentative word, considering moral involves subjects.
And when we have finished all the witticisms, and spent the needed time about words, definition and other -as I put first- dialectical onanism, we still suffer or feel drained at the sight of suffering.
That it is not invariable suffering, and maybe I cry about it and you just feel like shit? So? In the same sense the same cut can make me yell or make you pass out. But nobody in his senses would use that "relativist" argument to say that "pain doesn't exist".