From Wikipedia:Lewis starts with an observation that certain books purporting to teach English to school children have an implicit philosophy that all statements of value (such as "this waterfall is sublime") are merely statements about the speaker's feelings and say nothing about the object. He says that such a subjective view of values is faulty, and, on the contrary, certain objects and actions merit positive or negative reactions: that a waterfall can actually be objectively praiseworthy, and that one's actions can be objectively good or evil.
Though I'm a moral absolutist myself, I disagree with the waterfall illustration. Is fire intrinsically bad? We use it to cook and deem it good; however, we deem it bad when it burns down our home or kills people. It is only bad when it is doing harm, through its action. Humans, like the fire, are neither good or bad, but it is our objective actions which we undertake that make us so.
I'll have to check this one out myself.