Perce,
Well let's run with with your contention that people fundementally disagree about it and put that up against two arguments used against moral realism. 1) That Humans reach a moral concensus the triumph of which has already been spelt out by Outrider earlier in this thread.
If people fundamentally disagree. How is it possible to reach ANY consensus let alone international law? Secondly the only people who seem to buck consensus on wellbeing, according to Be Rational are 'Outliers' and these people are socio and psychopathic.
Now out of yours or there views I tend to side with them and say there is no fundamental disagreement about what is good or bad on a lot of what the basic commandments or laws should be.
Even by your abysmal standards this is incoherent nonsense. The point is that people are
able fundamentally to disagree about moral questions – unlike actual universal properties like gravity when you don’t get to decide for yourself whether they apply to you.
Why and how majorities often cohere around various moral precepts – that murder is morally wrong for example – is a second order issue, readily explained nonetheless by the personal and societal advantages of such determinations.
Most people will cohere around harmonious music being better than discordant music, around sunsets being more visually pleasing than images of road accidents. Does this mean that there must be aesthetic realism too, an objective aesthetic “landscape” that’s universally “out there” that we should identify, or does it mean instead that we respond with a mix of intuition and reasoning to moral questions just as we do to aesthetic ones?
From an admittedly crowded field of wrong arguments, WLC’s effort to claim objective morality that you’re aping here seems to me to be the most obviously stupid of all.
But doubtless you will be crossing your fingers that the subjective morality of people broadly is intersubjective between a majority of actors who aren't fundamentally disagreeing on what is right and wrong.
As that’s what we observe in the real world – people vote for other people who broadly at least reflect their moral outlooks, and those people in turn tend to enact laws that reflect those outlooks – why the need to cross your fingers?
I think we should and do go thermostatic on morality never seemingly capable of resting on the true moral point to enjoy it but always trying to find it/return to it.
Elephant bananas transmogrify hypnotically.
Hey, it’s funs this random word selection! OK, your turn again…