Se-SEE here to the best of my knowledge; the "functions in order" thing pookie made led me to going to keys2cognition to run a self-test; as of 1/1/2012, this is where I apparently am (gonna use "code" tag to effectively organize a table):
Code:
Se - *************************************** 39.0 excellent use
Te - ************************************** 38.1 excellent use
Si - ********************************* 34.0 good use
Fe - ****************************** 31.0 good use
Fi - **************************** 28.1 average use
Ni - **************************** 28.1 average use
Ne - ********************* 21.0 limited use
Ti - ******************** 20.9 limited use
Moralist (there are morals) vs. Nihilist (there are no morals)
The most obvious and clear markers I know of for moral quality amongst countries, societies, eras, etc., would be the average human life expectancy rates; this is far from complete though, and time spent keeping hyper-detailed score for these things would likely be better spent fixing the problems of the world themselves.
Cognitivist (morality can be proven) vs. Non-cognitivist (morality cannot be proven)
Leaning towards the latter (see above, "far from complete" is less than half done I think).
Divine Command (morality is based on authority) vs. Moral Realist (morality is based on arguments)
How can anything moral be correctly based on authority (as a concept, not the flesh-and-blood people who constitute said "authority") alone?
Utilitarian (results are what matter) vs. Deontological (actions are what matter)
Results matter. Actions achieve results. I lean towards forgiveness for accidental "bad" and gratefulness for accidental "good"...
Objectivist (morality can be understood from outside the person) vs. Subjectivist (morality cannot be understood from outside the person)
This one's a toughie, probably gonna be well-centered between the two...
Retributive (wrongdoers should suffer for their actions) vs. Restorative (wrongdoers should be taught to do the right thing)
The former is cruel and wasteful, the latter is right in just about all meanings of the term. Gonna go with option two here...