Our practical judgement will always have a subjective element, but the question is whether there is an absolute morality against which all is measured.....or is everything just a matter of opinion (which basically means that there is no morality, because without authority the concept of morality is meaningless).
Sure, which is why Christians disagree on what is moral and what isn't and so do atheists and this supports that moral judgments are indeed subjective. If you want to claim there is some absolute morality floating out there somewhere, it would be up to you to support that claim.
Personally, I wonder if it is better to speak of a scale of inferior to superior, rather than a black and white good/evil. That isn't to deny that some things are utterly evil (its barbeque-a-baby night at B L Zeebub's bar and grill) but that it isn't a purely digital phenomenon. Just a thought.[/QUOTE]
It is my opinion, if you were to give a morality test with a series of situations to atheists, Christians, Jews, Muslims and various other religions, they would agree on what is moral and what is not moral on the vast majority of the questions. Why, because we all have to live in a manner to be accepted in society and we all have a need to be accepted and don't want to be outcast. We all have a conscious, that we have to deal with in our actions and although there can be differences of opinion of what is moral and what is not moral, that difference is driven by; religious beliefs, culture and how our psyches developed over time.