ok, resisting the urge to make a joke out of this i will try to answer honestly...
my view of morality is a bit different. its not about do's/don'ts, my concept of "good" and "bad" are entirely dependent on the question "good or bad for who?". the answer, and my entire sense of morality, or rather, things i might feel bad or guilty for, lays between my tribalism - doing good by and not doing badly by those i care about, and in recent decade - urge for honesty with myself and the elements of my environment i am willing to let integrate into myself (loved ones). other people are to some extent potentials - people i might come to care about one way or another some day, as well as contributing members of an economy, and they can be people i enjoy, and there's certainly a big grey area between those two extremes, but... that's about it. i value the humanitarian approach, but its not part of anything i feel.
that's being said, i was ingrained from a young age with a sense of personal responsibility for the consequences of my actions, they are mine whether i like them or not, whether i intended them or not. i value being able to see things from all perspectives, and recognize all of them as elements within reality, whether they are "my own perspective" or not, regardless if they are agreeable to me. as such, it is impossible for me to protect my ego by dismissing, devaluing or not acknowledging when things I've done have hurt people i care about.
i can't view myself in black or white terms of righteousness, i can't hold a belief in my own moral purity or superiority, i don't get to idealize a life of no regrets, and i don't get to whisper to myself of what great person i am towards people i care about, only that i am on the constant process of getting better at it.
my two cents.
ow and i'm a 7w6 sx-dom ENTP based on the most recent updates (before used to think i was a 4w5).