1robin
Christian/Baptist
I don't know that the moral values are perfectly objective so much as inter-subjective. I guess I occupy a middle ground between total relativism and total absolutism. I was saying that I believe there to be an absolute reality or Truth beneath all appearances, but morals are different and have more to do with the proper way for humans to live together within the context of Earth. I don't equate morality with absolute Truth, but rather with partial or pragmatic "truths" created within particular contexts and due to limitations in human perception and language.
Well I will confine myself to more extreme examples just to illustrate the point. It would actually be wrong to torture a child for fun. It would actually be wrong to rape handicapped women. It would actually be wrong to exterminate a race of people for political or race superiority reason. In other words some things are wrong whether everyone or even anyone agrees or not. Moral relativists say things are only socially inconvenient and even that may change over time but nothing is actually wrong. If God exists then moral requirements are absolute and in effect objective (in that no subject of those requirements opinions had any effect on the standards) and judgment would be absolute and perfectly just. It may turn out that God does not exist. I can't prove he does but the implications of his existence or nonexistence are easily determined. If God does not exist nothing is actually wrong just individually or socially inconvenient to a certain group. That is why Dostoevsky said: Without God all things are permissible. That is also why even Nietzsche knew that to kill God would be the equivalent of wiping away the horizon with a sponge.Could you please list what you consider to be objective moral values so I might have a better idea what you mean?