I didn't say it was new.1. God=Nature, that was an ancient concept. Perhaps since existence of humans. Not new at all!
2. Basically all the major religions (organised institutions) nowadays are actually quite young relatively, comparing to our human history.
I said it generally isn't read that way. Which it isn't.
Earliest beliefs are considered to have been monotheistic. Much later giving way to many Gods, eventually returning to the one God idea again for mainstream contemporary religions, putting the imaginary God concept as creator above everything including Nature.
God=Nature is not the way a vast majority of religious belief has ever gone as far as I'm aware.
I don't know what you mean by "(sub)set".3. imo, morality is an orderly system among the individuals within a (sub)set of humans. They define their morals for common goodness. That, the expectations of goodness, hence laws and legal systems, can be dynamically changed according to their experience along their time line/span. New laws replace old laws.
Broadly speaking I think we agree, what is moral and morality itself are those standards which promote well being and do least harm possible and least necessary to people and things. In my view, standards encapsulated into law by a free and democratic society openly voting its lawmakers into and out of office, is a moral procedure which allows morality to evolve to the highest definition.
Morality does not belong to, nor is it the preserve of any "(sub)set" of humans. That would be less than moral. Perhaps you don't mean that.
It's true the majority in any free society put what they consider to be moral standards into effect, so I suppose that leaves a subset that might not agree but who in the long run might be found to be right.
However Relative morality quite rightly (and therefore morally
), does rationally render reliance on "(sub)set" God as less than moral to say the least, whether or not God=Nature.However you've dropped any mention of God as a "(sub)set" being required or necessary, which was my point. If that's what you're saying then I agree with you that far.
I think we can still also agree morality is relative and cannot be the idealistically absolute some like to claim it is.
