Gah. Why must you hide behind all these definitions? What's important here is whether it's objective or not, whether it is set by some agency outside ourselves or not.
Discourse in philosophy by nature, is technical, precise, and must accurately convey the concepts that they are regarding. It is like comparing how fans yell and shout and talk at the superbowl game to how surgeons communicate with each other in the operating room. At a game its ok to yell and shout and not care too much about the words youre using and how they are used. You can say stuff like: "Woo look at that boy over there catch that thing, look at how he flies down the field!" That is accpetable in a football game. But if you were in an operating room, the situation called for you to be precise and technical in your speech, you wouldnt say to your assistant: "hey girl hand me that shiny thing over there with the little teeth on it so I can cut this guy open over here, and slap that brown looking liquid over there in that bottle on his stomach first fore' i cut him open!"
In philosophical discourse, our correct usage of applicable terms is indispensible to effective communication. To approach it with little to know knowledge and speak from an uneducated, non-techinical, over-genralizing way makes it nearly impossible for effective discussion. This is stuff you learn when doing undergrad studies in philosophy.
This doesn't tell me anything of use.
It tells you what ethical subjectivism is.
Except that the Judge knows that morality (and don't get picky about the terms, okay?) is coming from the society of humans of which he is a part, not from a god or other such entity.
Once again, you are confusing the issue. In philosophy, it is a well-known precept that you do not attack ontology with epistemology. It simply does not follow that because the judge learned or knows (x) from his society that therefore (x) does not exist objectively. I will give you an illustration. Let us suppose that in America, we are taught that every person is endowed with certain inalienable rights, namely, life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Just because we are taught this in our society, does that mean that therefore it is not true for every other society? Are not people in every society, in every culture, in all the world entitled to those things at the very least? And to be deprived of those things is objectively really wrong? Is it not wrong even if the society someone lives in says: "No one is entitled to respect. No one is entitled to freedom. No one is entitled to happiness."
Would we not think that that society was wrong in believing that? And guess what? Even if every member in that hypothetical society agreed with that statement, which is not likely, what if they tried to come to your country and convince the politicians and leaders of your country to adopt the same view? Would you just throw you hands up and say: "Oh well, since what is right and wrong is determined by a society's beliefs, we should not think they are wrong and should go ahead and let them take our freedom, our lives, and our happiness from us?
Obviously not Tiberius come on man. Relativism of any kind be it subjective, cultural, etc. is simply not livable, tenable, practical or rational.
You will have to abandon it. You have continuously been shown it is ridiculous. Why still hold to it? You seem to think this is about me pointing the finger and laughing and saying: Hahaha! Im right, youre wrong, hahaha..
But that simply is not it. I am trying to show you that not even you can live according to this view. No one can. It is impossible as moral creatures to live as if nothing is really right or wrong. It is impossible.
I thought the Bonobo you were referring to were people, not pygmy chimpanzees.
The fact that you use chimpanzees in an argument for moral relativism is sad Tiberius. It really is. I personally do not care one bit if a "society" of chimpanzees have sex a lot. They are animals. They do not get married, they do not exchange wedding vows. They do not promise to be faithful to their spouse and to love and cherish them and to take care of them in sickness and in health. We are humans, and even though your atheism does not allow you to see them as intrinsically any different than us, THEY ARE NOT US. We are humans and we are moral creatures. We are not chimpanzees. Chimpanzees do not "rape" each other, they do not "murder" each other, their actions have no moral dimension at all. They forcefully copulate, they kill each other but when these things take place, they do not hold courts of law and dispense punishment to one another.
So please do not use their sexual behavior as an argument agains the objective moral values and duties that HUMANS apprehend and base their lives on.
And yet we have instances of populations of people where Polygamy and polyandry occurs.
Of course. But are these exceptions or are they the norm? And does this count as a sound arguement against objective moral values and duties? The objective value and duty that is the basis for monogamy is the basis for polygamy and that is that
spouses are to love one another, take care of one another, and respect one another. This is true for all spouses in all places, in all times, regardless of cultural practices. Just because a small portion of people adhere to uncommon marital practices in no way necessarily leads to the conclusion that moral values and duties are not objective.
And there's your mistake. You assume that such polyamory must be "at the expense of the emotional and physical well-being of their wives." If it is an acceptable part of this society, why would the wives have any problem with it?
I challenge you to name ONE society where the men are seen as being virtuous and noble for cheating on their wives, having unprotected sex with whatever woman they want, spreading STD's around, breaking marriage vows, having illegitimate children, and in general acting without any self restraint. I challenge you to provide one society that has done those things. If you can, guess what I will say? THEY WERE WRONG. THEY WERE OBJECTIVELY WRONG IN PROMOTING THAT BEHAVIOR.