that all morals espoused by a person can change overtime - depending on where he is brought up! that the accepted morals of man is not absolute - meaning, it can be changed, modified, etc.
I agree.
I'd also like to extend that to institutions, notably, the (Roman Catholic) Church. And society in general.
Hence,
ethics, or (in simplistic terms) the study of morality.
No matter what your moral standards, you can't have changing ethics. Otherwise, you're
really just adopting whatever course of action you find convenient or justifiable at the time.
If your ethics says, "all morality is subjective" then my morality is no better or worse than yours. If your ethics says, "all morality is objective, based on
X", then you
have to discard all other bases for morality that disagrees with
X.
This, IMhO, is where the confusion, and conflict, between the various faiths (religions) stems from, each branding their holy texts and bases for universal morality.
If your ethics says, "As long as if I can do it, you should be entitled to do it, and neither of us is imposing anything on anyone else, then it's ok", well, then that means you and I can pray to our respective deities (or not) in private. Or destroy religious icons (that you rightfully own) in private, if that's what your faith dictates.
By extension, you or I should be able to decide whether we want to use condoms (or not) during sex. Your morals say "Go ahead", fine. A fundamentalist Catholic's morals say, "No, the Pope doesn't want us to" then that's equally fine
1.
Or another example, you and I should both be able eat what we want, even if my killer
lechon kawali is literally a killer with all the cholesterol and saturated fat
2. A Muslim might brand me
haraam.
1 If a Catholic schoolgirl says, "I'm on the pill" then you lucky basterd!
2 Vegans would say the pig didn't give its consent. I just say, "Thanks, pig."