Which of the current social ideals (almost uniform to all countries) do you disagree with exactly? Reversing global warming, humanism, equality to women, no discrimination based on colour or sex, protection of children, animal rights, non violence....and so on! Do let me know....!
You have an astonishing aptitude for ignoring points you don't want to address, Sriram. I don't think anyone on this thread so far has suggested that there aren't many generally shared ideals in their own society. I certainly haven't. So you are not responding to something I've written. Your post looks more like an attempt to shelter behind a straw man.
In the OP you wrote: 'One of the hallmarks of our times is the absence of Idealism. No one has the confidence in oneself or the trust in others to determine and follow any set of ideals any more.' And yet here you are expressing incredulity that someone might disagree with societal ideals. So which is it? Do most of us already already share these ideals or does 'no one' do so any more? If ideals are, by your earlier definition, ideals of society as a whole then presumably most of us already share them, in which case what are you complaining about? If 'no one' shares them then they cannot be shared societal ideals and therefore aren't ideals at all, just the personal objectives of adolescent hippies such as myself.
I imagine you did your best to choose ideals that you thought nobody could reasonably disagree with when you complied the list you provided in your response (above), yet sadly some societies do not generally subscribe to all of these, as you must well know. I've certainly been to cultures where animal rights, for example, are scarcely recognised at all, and women can scarcely be considered to have gained equality throughout the world. According to you the 'mature' view in societies that did not grant animals and women their 'due' rights would be confirm those prejudices. Or are you presuming the right to judge which societal ideals count and which don't? Earlier you lamented those who didn't subscribe to things being right or wrong
in themselves, which would suggest that if ideals are to be thought of as 'right thinking' then they cannot change over time or vary from place to place. As ideals do vary widely and are subject to constant revision then presumably they cannot count as right thinking, in which case why do you demand that everyone follows them? You seem to have tied yourself up in knots.