Do you believe in an objective morality capable of being scientifically investigated (a la Sam Harris *or others*), or are you a moral nihilist/relativist? There seems to be some division on this point. I would have thought Less Wrong to be well in the former camp.
Edit: There seems to be some confusion - when I say "an objective morality capable of being scientifically investigated (a la Sam Harris *or others*)" - I do NOT mean something like a "one true, universal, metaphysical morality for all mind-designs" like the Socratic/Platonic Form of Good or any such nonsense. I just mean something in reality that's mind-independent - in the sense that it is hard-wired, e.g. by evolution, and thus independent/prior to any later knowledge or cognitive content - and thus can be investigated scientifically. It is a definite "is" from which we can make true "ought" statements relative to that "is". See drethelin's comment and my analysis of Clippy.
This is a bad example, because "moral realism" really refers to normative moral statements, not descriptive ones.
I don't think there is any interesting controversy in describing what people think is wrong. The interesting controversy is whether anything is actually wrong or not. THe problem is with "Morality is part of biology" is it is ambiguous at best, many people would see that as a descriptive statement, not telling them that "therefore you ought to do what your biology tells you to do."
Best to work with unambiguous statements since the requirement is "at least some."
"Killing randomly chosen children to see what it feels like is wrong" is a normative moral statement, that if objectively true means morality realists are right.
"Most people think killing randomly chosen childern to see what it feels like is wrong" is a descriptive statement that is objective, but doesn't tell you whether you ought to kill randomly chosen children or not.
I think, at this point, a scientist would ask what you actually meant by normative moral statements. I.e. what you mean by "right" and "wrong". I figure if you are sufficiently clear about that, the issue is dissolved, one way or the other.