This has been a very interesting discussion on semantics. But I think that's all it really is. We're defining terms differently. And I don't think we really disagree on much other than the objective/subjective nature of morality.
Are you introducing the concept of morality existing in a vacuum, or do you think that I already have?
I thought you already had. If morality was created separate from a mind to perceive it, could it not exist in a vacuum?
I think that is the logical conclusion of your position. They are no more than prejuidices of one sort or another.
Good and bad are no more than subjective. Creations of our minds resulting from our common experiences, empathy, and self interest, ultimately resulting from our DNA and brain chemistry.
Using words like "prejudices" (instead of say "judgments") and redefining "morality" to exclude subjective moral judgments just looks to me like attempts to emotionally load your terms.
Query: Is head hunting right or wrong?
I think its great that people come to me and offer me another job.
But separate from some sort of objective morality, while we might subjective opinions of somethings rightness or wrongness, we cah't really say that our morality is in fact right at all. We can't say that it is right, because in reality there is no right nor wrong, on our particular prejuidices with regard to those things that we call right and wrong for reasons about from any moral reality.
This is all about our definitions of "right" and "wrong", on which we differ. You are correct that without objective morality there can be no objective statements of right or wrong. That isn't saying as much as I think you think it is though.
If I understand you correctly, you want to say that there is no objective source for morality.
Yes. That is my view.
And I want to say that if that is true, then there is no sense talking about "morality" at all. That what you call morals is not morality at all, but something else.
""s added by me.
This is semantics. You can call subjective morality what you wish, but it is still what it is. It is a sense of right and wrong. And it is often universal amongst humans (due to what I mentioned above).
This is where talking about morality when you don't believe in objective morality leads you astray. With only subjective morality, you have no ground to stand on for you or anyone else to make a moral decison.
If you redefine morality as you have, then sure. But so what? You are still making decisions for the same purposes and with the same impacts and value.
I reject your redefinition and I say morality must be subjective, for objective morality doesn't exist. So you're not talking about morality unless you are talking about the subjective.
I actually find belief in objective morality to be one of the more dangerous things religions lead us towards. If morality is thought to be objective, and thought to be revealed to us, then we are prone to accept this "revealed" code of "right" and "wrong" and subdue our own moral sense. Things like burning witches, stoning people to death, or flying planes into buildings become "moral" even though our own internal senses of good and bad scream otherwise.
True, absent a belief in objective morality we may decide that doing a horrible act is just, because we are psychopaths or have been brainwashed and our victims demonized, but at least we could still readjust if a non-psychopath or non-programmed moral voice in us tells us otherwise.
Obedience to an external moral code, if you don't internally agree with that code, is just bare obedience. And I say that is not morality at all. Many things in religions follow this pattern. Some political ideologies do too.
If you speak to believers/followers you often find them telling you that many things are "right" because such-and-such God or Great Leader says they are right, and not because they the believer actually themselves feel they are right. Recipe for disaster that is.