I understood exactly what you meant by 'well being'.
I never asked such as thing, you gave me the concept of 'well being' as good, and I asked you to explain, what is this universal concept of 'well being'?
Are you asking me to define well being (state of happiness, good health, contentment, etc), or are you asking me to explain why we should prefer well being over suffering? Both seem clear to me, and both can be explained at the level of the brain. What is the universal 'good life', well obviously there are a range of suitable answers.
What is the correct life?
Again, there is a range of suitable answers. However there are right and wrong answers. For example, the Moral Relativist will claim that say 'Honor Killing' is morally permissible in the middle east, it is a
cultural difference, its all relative. However I would argue that Honor Killings are not conducive to well being (as it promotes fear, grief and may stultify love; compassion); that the same society without Honor Killing would be a objectively better society to live in. Morality after all is a
any system of interlocking values, practices and psychological mechanisms that work together to suppress selfishness/suffering and encourage well being/altruism. Some Moral systems are simply better at optimizing well being than others (i.e a system that incorporates free speech, free love, free inquiry will maximize well being better than a system that does not. This is empirical).
I don't believe there is such as thing. One life is as good as another.
What on earth are you trying to suggest here?
?So you would happily trade places with Heidi Fritzel? Or a starving, malaria ridden child in Zimbabwe? What a wicked thing to say, because it suggests that it is not important to be concerned with well being and suffering; by your logic rape would be permissible because it has no effect on 'one being as good as another'.
To say why something is morally good, I think you first and most importantly have to say why it is consequential? If something has no consequence (and in a big universe over an infinite timeframe, of what importance is life?), then there is no reason to act in any particular way in regard to it.
?But our actions do have consequences. These lives are the only ones we are ever going to live, they
are important to us, we
are concerned about maximizing well being and minimizing suffering, we
are socially aware mammal. You strike me as a Nilhist. Not good.
The only way you can argue for absolute moral truth, is by introducing god into the discussion, it can't be justified on reason.
It has nothing to do with a God....moral truths
can transcend culture without any supernatural intervention. I am concerned about your use of 'absolute moral truth', I have already stated that there is usually
range of approipriate answers to any given moral question. I never stated there was one absolute moral truth/answer.
You're still using the food analogy, which is silly. There is no absolute distinction between food and poison. One can be the other, depending in dosage. It's an analogy for relativism.
Nope. Your just plain wrong here. There
is a distinction between cyanide and water, a very clear atomic distinction, and a very clear distinction in how our digestive tract and body deals with each molecule. To say that a high dosage of water is detrimental to our health only makes it a poisen
at high dosages, this nuance can be and is incorporated into any framework that helps us distinguis poisen from food (as nuances can be instilled into moral frameworks).
A moral relativist doesn't say there are no absolutes, only that there are no moral absolutes.
Lol. Whats the difference? The only difference I see is 'morality' is an area into which proper inquiry has been scarce, whilst other areas have enjoyed proper attention.
There is no contradiction. If they were saying "truth is relative", that may be the case, but you don't have to be a relativist to be a moral relativist.
Again, moral relavism is simply an extension from relativism, the only reason you think differently is because we may find questions of morality a bit murky, a bit difficult at this point in time.
This discussion is only about moral relativism, not relativism as a whole, I'm not interested into getting into the larger discussion on truth.
There is really no difference between the two, however you have not stated why you think that there is a distinction (infact you have not attempted to establish any positive points yet, you have only attempted to make negative points agiasnt my arguement, so If your going to attack Moral Realism; what is your alternative?).