The concept of right and wrong, good and bad, is very, very deep. Ethics, or what is ethical does vary from culture to culture, based on the predominate religious views or lack thereof. But good and bad, right and wrong are elements of ethics but not necessarily ethics in and of themselves. In other words, regardless of a societies' religious backgrounds, I don't think any culture in general believes that murderers, liars, cowards, and torturer's are good. I think all societies (at least the citizens in their hearts if not their governments in action) believe we should feed the hungry, clothe the poor, and help heal the sick and ailing. These things transcend ethics to some degree. Helping orphans and widows seems universal not just because we wouldn't want to be in their shoes, but because they need to be helped. This inecscapable feeling within my heart and my mind of "good" and "bad," "right" and "wrong," is that it is universal; that it is concrete like natural laws. Where I find natural laws and "universal" beliefs, I tend to think that there must be an ultimate lawgiver, and an ultimate conscience that has left his indelible fingerprint on our hearts and minds. My views of right and wrong were heavily influenced by an agnostic Father and a "non-religious" Mother. They, however, are as much a part of the human race as any other atheists, theists, and agnostics. My parents learned from their parents, some of us learned from step-parents, foster parents, and in some cases no parents. But we all seem to have some inescapable and universal beliefs imprinted on our consciences. The real argument, unanswerable and unproveable by a simple mind such as mine, is where is the ultimate origins of ethics....did it evolve blindly from the forces of nature and human interactions and relationships, or did it come from a superior mind and conscience and "un-caused cause" or a "prime mover." Don't let the millions of mistakes of men and women religious and non-relgious blind you to the possibility that ethics or the deeper "right" and "wrong", "good" and "bad" has originated from God. No one has hurt me more in life, sadly enough, than some of my very own Christian brothers and sisters, or my very own family who taught me "my ethics." As I believe this is unfair or unjust whom can I appeal to or cry out for help if nature blindly made it so, or culture shaped it so? I feel cheated when "right" or "wrong" is no longer an absolute; I feel then that ethics are a lie. But on the deepest levels "right" and "wrongs" become absolutes and I feel bound by universal laws and at the mercy of a Universal Law Giver. For this reason I don't possess enough faith to be an atheist, for those who doubt the existence of God however, we all have and do at one time or another. I don't know if that's ethical, "good" or "bad," but I dare say it's common and normal at times!