Having read through your 196 again, I agree that you have described morality very well but not the Objective Morality that Alan imagines it to be - and that is what this whole thread is about! He says that Objective Morality is a fact, whether or not anyone agrees with it, but you seem to think it's what is universally agreed to be moral.
No thats entirely incorrect I think its a fact regardless of whether anyone agrees it or not and it is not dependent on anyone's or even everyone's agreement. There is nothing in my reply 196 that should make you believe otherwise if properly understood and I'd be interested to know what it is that I've said that would make you possibly think that I am advocating morality = universal agreement.
If indeed you mean the sort of behaviour that we agree all civilised people should follow, then I am with you. If however you think some outside agent has laid down certain ways of behaviour which it/he/she wants us to follow then I think you're wrong.
Very few modern theists support a classic divine command theory of how morality is related to God. Neither I or Alan have advocated this view as far as I can see.
It means that there could be objectively moral behaviour that none of us agree with but how would we know what it is? If we don't know what it is we would have to decide what we think it is - and that is subjective not objective!
How we discover OM depends on the account we give of it, but again I have addressed this in post 196 so you don't seem to have read it very carefully.
I not only think it's wrong, I think it's dangerous! Islamic terrorists imagine God looks down on them kindly if they take the lives of unbelievers - and not just unbelievers in God or even unbelievers in Mohammad but unbelievers in their distorted view of Islam! This is what is possible when you think morality is something other than what you instinctively feel to be right.
Its interesting that a couple of times in the history of anit-realist ethics, its advocates have made the mistake of thinking that anti-realism somehow gives a preference to those who are tolerant of other peoples opinions and necessarily respect the views of others - most however have quickly recognised that this is not a claim they can make and is of course totally illogical - if there is no objective standard of morality then there is no reason to suppose that toleration or respect of peoples rights is a good thing - its only good for you if you think its good if someone else doesn't then there's nothing you can say that makes them wrong - they just disagree with you about tolerance and respecting rights. The realist by contrast can say that, if toleration of peoples opinions and rights is morally correct then it is the correct thing to do irrespective of peoples opinions about them and that the Islamic terrorists are simply making a mistake if they think otherwise. The fact that someone can have a mistaken view about morality that leads them to do evil things is no more the fault of realism than the fact that people can have evil instincts under an irrealist view. The difference is that the moral realist has the resources to say 'you are wrong to do that' while the irrealist can only, at best, consistently say 'i disaprove of you doing that'.
I think we'll have to agree to disagree on this so I wll now bow out of this debate.
Ok well that's up to you but I don't think its not been so much of a disagreement as you totally misrepresenting what I and other moral realists think, but as you wish.