Tranquil Bondservant
Nothing without Elohim
In order to justify a moral action you need to say why it's true and the opposing moral action is false. The lack of a universal authoritative standard by which to evaluate morals within a secular paradigm also means that two people who morally oppose each other would be equally correct in their moral stances and you couldn't say one person's morals are wrong, only that their morals are different. Therefore, if you want to evaluate behaviours from person to person or ascribe any kind of value/hierarchy to morals you need to assume the truth of a moral stance or standard in order to judge or weigh evidence against said behaviours. To judge by a standard is not relative. So assuming human flourishing (empathy, kindness, love) as a standard by which to judge things is to assume without justification a moral truth which doesn't exist within the paradigm. As the value ascribed to each individual moral stance or action are different from person to person and you have no authoritative transcendent standard which imparts value to and imposes parameters on specific behaviours.Being moral can be defined by:
a) theological source - the lifestyle is not condemned for example in the Bible
b) evolutionary source - the lifestyle is not against the survival and prosperity of the species
c) sociological source - the lifestyle is not against the survival and prosperity of the society
d) health source - the lifestyle supports physical and mental health
There are probably some other basis for morals, these are just some examples. People frequently mix multiple basis and look for/suppor a lifestyle that makes the most sense in all of them.
So you can claim other moral sources for morality but within a secular paradigm it's an entirely circular justification for moral actions.
tldr: your a,b,c,d propositions all rely upon established moral truths that don't exist independent of a transcendent source for morality.
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