By instinct, I meant any form of behaviour that comes without teaching, ie natural understanding of right or wrong.1) humans have no instincts
For me this basic disposition for right and wrong are contingent to enviornmental factors, ie I believe under different evolutionary circumstances, infants will exhibit different 'basic understanding of right/wrong', which implies moral relativism. This statement of course being a direct collary of evolution theory as expounded by mainstream biologist. Of course you are free to discount evolution, in which case we can further discuss evolution in another thread.this "instinct" that these children are born with is moral absolutism--a basic understanding of right/wrong. so you're actually agreeing with me in a funny way.
Also I still fail to see how the fact that children born with an innate moral compass implies moral absolutism. As he grows older the direction of the compass can change directions. Your statement does not exclude this supposition: A child who instinctly reviles hiting other infant might grow in to an adult seeing no problem in hitting his wife.
but enough to show that moral absolutism fails, by citing counter examples to standard moral norms, which happen to be my intention anyway.there are small anamolous groups/societies everywhere that deviate from the norm--not enough, however, to back any statement implying that basic morals are cultural.
Also, you have misread my position regarding basic morals, my position is thus:
meaning basic moral values are what are suitable for the continuation for the species.I view 'right' being suitable for the continuation of the species and 'wrong' being unsuitable for it.
In nowhere have I tried to develop the case where morals are cultural. morals are cultural and a host of other factors