By analyzing our morality systems we're able to spot just one dilemma (human embryos in scientific research). - John_Mann
That could not be further from the facts. I could list plenty more examples. We are discussing stem-cell research as a sample of conflict between secular objective ethics and those based on religious dogma. We could debate homosexuality, abortion, fertility treatment, contraception, the role of women, premarital sex and many more issues.
In every case your position would be based on unproven assertions about supernatural events. I would advocate a position based on a rational investigation about the consequences of actions and how they affect the well-being of conscious creatures.
Your approach would be based on an imaginary perfect being - absolute morality. Your views would be intransigent and impervious to reason since they are prefaced by an implied "Thus sayeth the almighty..."
My moral choices would be open to new information.
The gulf is very large.
And the bases of our morality systems are different. What you defined as absolute vs objective (which I disagree) and I define as Catholic vs atheist.
You keep saying you disagree but you never give a reason. Your moral judgements have no connection with objective facts. You admit they are a matter of "faith" which is a gift of your god to those whom he chooses. What could possibly be less objective?
You say embryonic research can bring a lot of good. But China is doing this kind of research since it was possible because they don't have this moral dilemma. I don't know nothing about what China discovered in this specific research, do you know about some panacea invented based on this research?
It is totally irrelevant to the conversation. Your objection is not practical but ideological. No matter how much benefit ever comes of human stem-cell research, no matter how much suffering is alleviated your objection will not - cannot - weaken one iota. It is based on an absolute standard rooted in the character of your deity. It is immune to facts.
Also I repeat you have a very Sola Scriptura influence in your atheism.
And yet I have not used scripture once in our entire conversation!
My strongest argument against the christian god does not depend on the bible at all...
If I am talking with Evangelical Protestants I will debate scripture, if I am talking to a Roman Catholic I will address your peculiar epistemology.
And your position about "there's no absolute(s) in the universe" is a contradiction by itself.
I have never said "there's no absolute(s) in the universe". Why did you put those words in quotation marks. They are not my words. You have repeatedly misrepresented my views in this conversation. I have tried very hard to present your position honestly. I said there is no such thing as an absolute standard of morality.
The reason of why our morality seems to be very similar is because I believe everyone has a soul created with absolute moral commands.
And yet you have still presented no evidence to support this assertion. Genuine and sincere christians can be found on both sides of every moral dilemma. Your "absolute moral commands" are not so absolute are they?
Even if you deny the existence of the Law-giver you can't deny the law written inside you.
We have the capacity for making moral judgements. We have evolved a capacity for justice, reciprocity, empathy, as well as disgust, anger and shame. All of this can easily be accounted for by evolution - there is no ghost in the machine.