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Secular humanism

Secular humanism is a philosophy, belief system, or life stance that embraces human reason, logic, secular ethics, and philosophical naturalism, while specifically rejecting religious dogma, supernaturalism, and superstition as the basis of morality and decision-making.[1][2][3][4]

Secular humanism posits that human beings are capable of being ethical and moral without religion or belief in a deity. It does not, however, assume that humans are either inherently good or evil, nor does it present humans as being superior to nature. Rather, the humanist life stance emphasizes the unique responsibility facing humanity and the ethical consequences of human decisions. Fundamental to the concept of secular humanism is the strongly held viewpoint that ideology—be it religious or political—must be thoroughly examined by each individual and not simply accepted or rejected on faith. Along with this, an essential part of secular humanism is a continually adapting search for truth, primarily through science and philosophy. Many secular humanists derive their moral codes from a philosophy of utilitarianism, ethical naturalism, or evolutionary ethics, and some advocate a science of morality.

Humanists International, founded by Julian Huxley and Jaap van Praag, is the world union of more than one hundred humanist, rationalist, irreligious, atheist, Bright, secular, Ethical Culture, and freethought organizations in more than 40 countries. The "Happy Human" is recognized as the official symbol of humanism internationally, used by secular humanist organizations in every part of the world.

The term itself is not uncontested. "Secular humanism" is not a universally used phrase, and is most prevalent in the United States. Most member organisations of Humanists International, for example, use simply the term "humanism" to refer to this concept, with some commentators remarking that "'hyphenated humanism' easily becomes more about the adjective than its referent".

Terminology edit

The meaning of the phrase secular humanism has evolved over time. The phrase has been used since at least the 1930s by Anglican priests,[5] and in 1943, the then Archbishop of Canterbury, William Temple, was reported as warning that the "Christian tradition... was in danger of being undermined by a 'Secular Humanism' which hoped to retain Christian values without Christian faith."[6] During the 1960s and 1970s the term was embraced by some humanists who considered themselves anti-religious,[7] as well as those who, although not critical of religion in its various guises, preferred a non-religious approach.[8] The release in 1980 of A Secular Humanist Declaration by the newly formed Council for Democratic and Secular Humanism (CODESH, later the Council for Secular Humanism, which with CSICOP in 1991 jointly formed the Center for Inquiry and in 2015 both ceased separate operations, becoming CFI programs) gave secular humanism an organisational identity within the United States; but no overall organisation involved currently uses a name featuring "secular humanism".

However, many adherents of the approach reject the use of the word secular as obfuscating and confusing, and consider that the term secular humanism has been "demonized by the religious right... All too often secular humanism is reduced to a sterile outlook consisting of little more than secularism slightly broadened by academic ethics. This kind of 'hyphenated humanism' easily becomes more about the adjective than its referent".[9] Adherents of this view, including Humanists International and the American Humanist Association, consider that the unmodified but capitalized word Humanism should be used. The endorsement by the International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) of the capitalization of the word Humanism, and the dropping of any adjective such as secular, is quite recent. The American Humanist Association began to adopt this view in 1973, and the IHEU formally endorsed the position in 1989. In 2002 the IHEU General Assembly unanimously adopted the Amsterdam Declaration, which represents the official defining statement of World Humanism for Humanists. This declaration makes exclusive use of capitalized Humanist and Humanism, which is consistent with IHEU's general practice and recommendations for promoting a unified Humanist identity.[10][unreliable source] To further promote Humanist identity, these words are also free of any adjectives, as recommended by prominent members of IHEU.[11] Such usage is not universal among IHEU member organizations, though most of them do observe these conventions.

History edit

Historical use of the term humanism (reflected in some current academic usage), is related to the writings of pre-Socratic philosophers. These writings were lost to European societies until Renaissance scholars rediscovered them through Muslim sources and translated them from Arabic into European languages.[12] Thus the term humanist can mean a humanities scholar, as well as refer to The Enlightenment/ Renaissance intellectuals, and those who have agreement with the pre-Socratics, as distinct from secular humanists.

Secularism edit

 
George Holyoake coined the term "secularism" and led the secular movement in Britain from the mid-19th century.

In 1851 George Holyoake coined the term "secularism"[13] to describe "a form of opinion which concerns itself only with questions, the issues of which can be tested by the experience of this life".[14]

The modern secular movement coalesced around Holyoake, Charles Bradlaugh and their intellectual circle. The first secular society, the Leicester Secular Society, dates from 1851. Similar regional societies came together to form the National Secular Society in 1866.

Positivism and the Church of Humanity edit

Holyoake's secularism was strongly influenced by Auguste Comte, the founder of positivism and of modern sociology. Comte believed human history would progress in a "law of three stages" from a theological phase, to the "metaphysical", toward a fully rational "positivist" society. In later life, Comte had attempted to introduce a "religion of humanity" in light of growing anti-religious sentiment and social malaise in revolutionary France. This religion would necessarily fulfil the functional, cohesive role that supernatural religion once served.

Although Comte's religious movement was unsuccessful in France, the positivist philosophy of science itself played a major role in the proliferation of secular organizations in the 19th century in England. Richard Congreve visited Paris shortly after the French Revolution of 1848 where he met Auguste Comte and was heavily influenced by his positivist system. He founded the London Positivist Society in 1867, which attracted Frederic Harrison, Edward Spencer Beesly, Vernon Lushington, and James Cotter Morison amongst others.

In 1878, the Society established the Church of Humanity under Congreve's direction. There they introduced sacraments of the Religion of Humanity and published a co-operative translation of Comte's Positive Polity. When Congreve repudiated their Paris co-religionists in 1878, Beesly, Harrison, Bridges, and others formed their own positivist society, with Beesly as president, and opened a rival centre, Newton Hall, in a courtyard off Fleet Street.

The New York City version of the church was established by English immigrant Henry Edger. The American version of the "Church of Humanity" was largely modeled on the English church. Like the English version, it was not atheistic and had sermons and sacramental rites.[15] At times the services included readings from conventional religious works like the Book of Isaiah.[16] It was not as significant as the church in England, but did include several educated people.[17]

Ethical movement edit

 
Conway Hall in London

Another important precursor was the ethical movement of the 19th century. The South Place Ethical Society was founded in 1793 as the South Place Chapel on Finsbury Square, on the edge of the City of London,[18] and in the early nineteenth century was known as "a radical gathering-place".[19] At that point it was a Unitarian chapel, and that movement, like Quakers, supported female equality.[20] Under the leadership of Reverend William Johnson Fox,[21] it lent its pulpit to activists such as Anna Wheeler, one of the first women to campaign for feminism at public meetings in England, who spoke in 1829 on "rights of women". In later decades, the chapel changed its name to the South Place Ethical Society, now the Conway Hall Ethical Society. Today Conway Hall explicitly identifies itself as a humanist organisation, albeit one primarily focused on concerts, events, and the maintenance of its humanist library and archives. It bills itself as "The landmark of London's independent intellectual, political and cultural life."

In America, the ethical movement was propounded by Felix Adler, who established the New York Society for Ethical Culture in 1877.[22] By 1886, similar societies had sprouted up in Philadelphia, Chicago and St. Louis.[23]

These societies all adopted the same statement of principles:

  • The belief that morality is independent of theology;
  • The affirmation that new moral problems have arisen in modern industrial society which have not been adequately dealt with by the world's religions;
  • The duty to engage in philanthropy in the advancement of morality;
  • The belief that self-reform should go in lock step with social reform;
  • The establishment of republican rather than monarchical governance of Ethical societies;
  • The agreement that educating the young is the most important aim.

In effect, the movement responded to the religious crisis of the time by replacing theology with unadulterated morality. It aimed to "disentangle moral ideas from religious doctrines, metaphysical systems, and ethical theories, and to make them an independent force in personal life and social relations."[23] Adler was also particularly critical of the religious emphasis on creed, believing it to be the source of sectarian bigotry. He therefore attempted to provide a universal fellowship devoid of ritual and ceremony, for those who would otherwise be divided by creeds. Although the organisation was overwhelmingly made up of (and entirely led by) atheists, and were many of the same people as in the secular movement, Ethical organisations at that time publicly avoided debate about religious beliefs, publicly advocating neither atheism nor theism, agnosticism nor deism, instead stressing "deed without creed" and a "purely human basis" for morality.[23]

The first ethical society along these lines in Britain was founded in 1886. By 1896 the four London societies formed the Union of Ethical Societies, and between 1905 and 1910 there were over fifty societies in Great Britain, seventeen of which were affiliated with the Union. The Union of Ethical Societies would later incorporate as the Ethical Union, a registered charity, in 1928. Under the leadership of Harold Blackham, it renamed itself the British Humanist Association in 1967. It became the Humanists UK in 2017.

Secular humanism edit

In the 1930s, "humanism" was generally used in a religious sense by the Ethical movement in the United States, and not much favoured among the non-religious in Britain. Yet "it was from the Ethical movement that the non-religious philosophical sense of Humanism gradually emerged in Britain, and it was from the convergence of the Ethical and Rationalist movements that this sense of Humanism eventually prevailed throughout the Freethought movement".[24]

As an organised movement in its own right, humanism emerged from vibrant non-religious movements of the 18th and 19th centuries such as the Owenites, Ethical Culture, the freethinkers, secularists, and positivists, as well as a few non-religious radical Unitarian congregations. The first Humanist Manifesto announced the humanist movement by that name to the public in 1933, following work at the University of Chicago across the 1920s.[25] The American Humanist Association was incorporated as an Illinois non-profit organization in 1943. The International Humanist and Ethical Union was founded in 1952, when a gathering of world Humanists met under the leadership of Sir Julian Huxley. The British Humanist Association took that name in 1967, but had developed from the Union of Ethical Societies which had been founded by Stanton Coit in 1896.[26]

Manifestos and declarations edit

 
Organizations like Humanists International use the "Happy Human" symbol, based on a 1965 design by Denis Barrington.

Humanists have put together various Humanist Manifestos, in attempts to unify the Humanist identity.

The original signers of the first Humanist Manifesto of 1933, declared themselves to be religious humanists. Because, in their view, traditional religions were failing to meet the needs of their day, the signers of 1933 declared it a necessity to establish a religion that was a dynamic force to meet the needs of the day. However, this "religion" did not profess a belief in any god. Since then two additional Manifestos were written to replace the first. In the Preface of Humanist Manifesto II, in 1973, the authors Paul Kurtz and Edwin H. Wilson assert that faith and knowledge are required for a hopeful vision for the future. Manifesto II references a section on religion and states traditional religion renders a disservice to humanity. Manifesto II recognizes the following groups to be part of their naturalistic philosophy: "scientific", "ethical", "democratic", "religious", and "Marxist" humanism.

International Humanist and Ethical Union edit

In 2002, the IHEU General Assembly unanimously adopted the Amsterdam Declaration 2002 which represents the official defining statement of World Humanism.[27]

All member organisations of the International Humanist and Ethical Union are required by bylaw 5.1[28] to accept the Minimum Statement on Humanism:

Humanism is a democratic and ethical life stance, which affirms that human beings have the right and responsibility to give meaning and shape to their own lives. It stands for the building of a more humane society through an ethic based on human and other natural values in the spirit of reason and free inquiry through human capabilities. It is not theistic, and it does not accept supernatural views of reality.

To promote and unify "Humanist" identity, prominent members of the IHEU have endorsed the following statements on Humanist identity:[11]

  • All Humanists, nationally and internationally, should always use the one word Humanism as the name of Humanism: no added adjective, and the initial letter capital (by life stance orthography);
  • All Humanists, nationally and internationally, should use a clear, recognizable and uniform symbol on their publications and elsewhere: our Humanist symbol the "Happy Human";
  • All Humanists, nationally and internationally, should seek to establish recognition of the fact that Humanism is a life stance.

Council for Secular Humanism edit

According to the Council for Secular Humanism, within the United States, the term "secular humanism" describes a world view with the following elements and principles:[8]

  • Need to test beliefs – A conviction that dogmas, ideologies and traditions, whether religious, political or social, must be weighed and tested by each individual and not simply accepted by faith.
  • Reason, evidence, scientific method – A commitment to the use of critical reason, factual evidence and scientific method of inquiry in seeking solutions to human problems and answers to important human questions.
  • Fulfillment, growth, creativity – A primary concern with fulfillment, growth and creativity for both the individual and humankind in general.
  • Search for truth – A constant search for objective truth, with the understanding that new knowledge and experience constantly alter our imperfect perception of it.
  • This life – A concern for this life (as opposed to an afterlife) and a commitment to making it meaningful through better understanding of ourselves, our history, our intellectual and artistic achievements, and the outlooks of those who differ from us.
  • Ethics – A search for viable individual, social and political principles of ethical conduct, judging them on their ability to enhance human well-being and individual responsibility.
  • Justice and fairness – an interest in securing justice and fairness in society and in eliminating discrimination and intolerance.[29]
  • Building a better world – A conviction that with reason, an open exchange of ideas, good will, and tolerance, progress can be made in building a better world for ourselves and our children.

A Secular Humanist Declaration was issued in 1980 by the Council for Secular Humanism's predecessor, CODESH. It lays out ten ideals: Free inquiry as opposed to censorship and imposition of belief; separation of church and state; the ideal of freedom from religious control and from jingoistic government control; ethics based on critical intelligence rather than that deduced from religious belief; moral education; religious skepticism; reason; a belief in science and technology as the best way of understanding the world; evolution; and education as the essential method of building humane, free, and democratic societies.[30]

American Humanist Association edit

A general outline of Humanism is also set out in the Humanist Manifesto prepared by the American Humanist Association.[31]

Ethics and relationship to religious belief edit

In the 20th and 21st centuries, members of Humanist organizations have disagreed as to whether Humanism is a religion. They categorize themselves in one of three ways. Religious (or ethical) humanism, in the tradition of the earliest humanist organizations in the UK and US, attempts to fulfil the traditional social role of religion. Contemporary use of the word "religious" did not have the same connotations as its today.[32] Secular humanism considers all forms of religion, including religious humanism, to be superseded.[33]

However, distinctions between "ethical" and "secular" humanists are for the most part historical, and practically meaningless in the present day or to contemporary individuals who identify with humanism. Since the mid-20th century, the development of new concepts such as the "life stance" (which encompasses both humanist views and religious outlooks) has defused this conflict. Most humanist organisations identify with "humanism" without a pre-modifier (such a "secular" or "ethical") and assert humanism as a non-religious philosophy or approach to life. Generally speaking, all humanists, including religious humanists, reject deference to supernatural beliefs; promote the practical, methodological naturalism of science; and largely endorse the stance of metaphysical naturalism.[34] The result is an approach to issues in a secular way. Humanism addresses ethics without reference to the supernatural as well, attesting that ethics is a human enterprise (see naturalistic ethics).[2][3][4]

Accounts of humanism are also careful not to treat secular humanism analogously with religions, which implies a community who strictly attempt to adhere to the same obligations or beliefs. Holding a secular humanist philosophy does not prescribe a specific theory of morality or code of ethics. As stated by the Council for Secular Humanism,

Secular Humanism is not so much a specific morality as it is a method for the explanation and discovery of rational moral principles.[35]

Secular humanists affirm that with the present state of scientific knowledge, dogmatic belief in an absolutist moral or ethical system (e.g. Kantian, Islamic, Christian) is unreasonable. However, it affirms that individuals engaging in rational moral/ethical deliberations can discover some universal "objective standards".

We are opposed to absolutist morality, yet we maintain that objective standards emerge, and ethical values and principles may be discovered, in the course of ethical deliberation.[35]

Many humanists adopt principles of the Golden Rule. Some believe that universal moral standards are required for the proper functioning of society. However, they believe such necessary universality can and should be achieved by developing a richer notion of morality through reason, experience and scientific inquiry rather than through faith in a supernatural realm or source.[36]

Fundamentalists correctly perceive that universal moral standards are required for the proper functioning of society. But they erroneously believe that God is the only possible source of such standards. Philosophers as diverse as Plato, Immanuel Kant, John Stuart Mill, George Edward Moore, and John Rawls have demonstrated that it is possible to have a universal morality without God. Contrary to what the fundamentalists would have us believe, then, what our society really needs is not more religion but a richer notion of the nature of morality.[37]

Humanists Andrew Copson and Alice Roberts, in their casual introduction to humanism The Little Book of Humanism, propose that a distinctive aspect of humanist morality is its recognition that every moral situation is in some sense unique, and so potentially calls for different approach than the last (i.e. the ability to vacillate situationally between consequentialism and virtue ethics).[38] In the book, they quote from Kristen Bell's advocacy of moral particularism as developed by Jonathan Dancy.[39]

Humanism is compatible with atheism, and by definition usually entails at least a form of weak or agnostic atheism,[40] and agnosticism,[41] but being atheist or agnostic does not automatically make one a humanist. Nevertheless, humanism is diametrically opposed to state atheism.[42][43] According to Paul Kurtz, considered by some to be the founder of the American secular humanist movement,[44] one of the differences between Marxist–Leninist atheists and humanists is the latter's commitment to "human freedom and democracy" while stating that the militant atheism of the Soviet Union consistently violated basic human rights.[45] Kurtz also stated that the "defense of religious liberty is as precious to the humanist as are the rights of the believers".[45] Greg M. Epstein states that, "modern, organized Humanism began, in the minds of its founders, as nothing more nor less than a religion without a God".[46]

Many humanists address ethics from the point of view of ethical naturalism, and some support an actual science of morality.[47]

Modern context edit

 
David Niose, president of the American Humanist Association, speaks at a 2012 conference.

Secular humanist organizations are found in all parts of the world. Those who call themselves humanists are estimated to number between four[48][failed verification] and five[49][dubious ] million people worldwide in 31 countries, but there is uncertainty because of the lack of universal definition throughout censuses. Humanism is a non-theistic belief system and, as such, it could be a sub-category of "Religion" only if that term is defined to mean "Religion and (any) belief system". This is the case in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights on freedom of religion and beliefs. Many national censuses contentiously define Humanism as a further sub-category of the sub-category "No Religion", which typically includes atheist, rationalist and agnostic thought. In England, Wales[50] 25% of people specify that they have 'No religion' up from 15% in 2001 and in Australia,[51] around 30% of the population specifies "No Religion" in the national census. In the US, the decennial census does not inquire about religious affiliation or its lack; surveys report the figure at roughly 13%.[52] In the 2001 Canadian census, 16.5% of the populace reported having no religious affiliation.[53] In the 2011 Scottish census, 37% stated they had no religion up from 28% in 2001.[54] One of the largest Humanist organizations in the world (relative to population) is Norway's Human-Etisk Forbund,[55] which had over 86,000 members out of a population of around 4.6 million in 2013 – approximately 2% of the population.[56]

 
Levi Fragell, former Secretary General of the Norwegian Humanist Association and former president of the International Humanist and Ethical Union, at the World Humanist Congress 2011 in Oslo

The International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) is the worldwide umbrella organization for those adhering to the Humanist life stance. It represents the views of over three million Humanists organized in over 100 national organizations in 30 countries.[57] Originally based in the Netherlands, the IHEU now operates from London. Some regional groups that adhere to variants of the Humanist life stance, such as the humanist subgroup of the Unitarian Universalist Association, do not belong to the IHEU. Although the European Humanist Federation is also separate from the IHEU, the two organisations work together and share an agreed protocol.[58]

Starting in the mid-20th century, religious fundamentalists and the religious right began using the term "secular humanism" in hostile fashion. Francis A. Schaeffer, an American theologian based in Switzerland, seizing upon the exclusion of the divine from most humanist writings, argued that rampant secular humanism would lead to moral relativism and ethical bankruptcy in his book How Should We Then Live: The Rise and Decline of Western Thought and Culture (1976). Schaeffer portrayed secular humanism as pernicious and diabolical, and warned it would undermine the moral and spiritual tablet of America. His themes have been very widely repeated in Fundamentalist preaching in North America.[59] Toumey (1993) found that secular humanism is typically portrayed as a vast evil conspiracy, deceitful and immoral, responsible for feminism, pornography, abortion, homosexuality, and New Age spirituality.[60] In certain areas of the world, Humanism finds itself in conflict with religious fundamentalism, especially over the issue of the separation of church and state. Many Humanists see religions as superstitious, repressive and closed-minded, while religious fundamentalists may see Humanists as a threat to the values set out in their sacred texts.[61]

In recent years, humanists such as Dwight Gilbert Jones and R. Joseph Hoffmann have decried the over-association of Humanism with affirmations of non-belief and atheism. Jones cites a lack of new ideas being presented or debated outside of secularism,[62] while Hoffmann is unequivocal: "I regard the use of the term 'humanism' to mean secular humanism or atheism to be one of the greatest tragedies of twentieth century movementology, perpetrated by second-class minds and perpetuated by third-class polemicists and village atheists. The attempt to sever humanism from the religious and the spiritual was a flatfooted, largely American way of taking on the religious right. It lacked finesse, subtlety, and the European sense of history."[63]

Humanist celebrations edit

Humanism, as a term which describes a person's non-religious views, comes with no obligation to celebrate or revere specific days in the year as a religion would. As a result, individual humanists choose of their own accord whether to take part in prevailing national holidays where they live. For example, humanists in Europe and North America typically celebrate holidays, such as Christmas, but as secular holidays rather than Christian festivals.[64] Other humanists choose to mark the winter and summer solstice and the equinoxes. European humanists may often emphasise the fact that human beings have found reasons to celebrate at these times in the Northern Hemisphere for thousands of years before the arrival of Christianity.[65] Humanists may also identify culturally with religious traditions and holidays celebrated in their family in the community. For example, humanists with a Jewish identity will often celebrate most Jewish holidays in a secular manner.

Humanists International endorses World Humanist Day (21 June), Darwin Day (12 February), Human Rights Day (10 December) and HumanLight (23 December) as official days of humanist celebration, though none are yet a public holiday. Humanist organisations typically organise events around these dates which draw attention to their programmes of activities.

In many countries, humanist celebrants (officiants) perform celebrancy services for weddings, funerals, child namings, coming of age ceremonies, and other rituals. In countries like Scotland and Norway, these are extremely popular. In Scotland, more people have a humanist wedding than are married by any religious denomination, including Scotland's largest churches; over 20% of Scottish weddings are humanist. In Norway, over 20% of young people choose humanist coming-of-age ceremonies every year.

Legal mentions in the United States edit

The issue of whether and in what sense secular humanism might be considered a religion, and what the implications of this would be, has become the subject of legal maneuvering and political debate in the United States. The first reference to "secular humanism" in a US legal context was in 1961, although church-state separation lawyer Leo Pfeffer had referred to it in his 1958 book, Creeds in Competition.

Hatch amendment edit

The Education for Economic Security Act of 1984 included a section, Section 20 U.S.C.A. 4059, which initially read: "Grants under this subchapter ['Magnet School Assistance'] may not be used for consultants, for transportation or for any activity which does not augment academic improvement." With no public notice, Senator Orrin Hatch tacked onto the proposed exclusionary subsection the words "or for any course of instruction the substance of which is Secular Humanism". Implementation of this provision ran into practical problems because neither the Senator's staff, nor the Senate's Committee on Labor and Human Resources, nor the Department of Justice could propose a definition of what would constitute a "course of instruction the substance of which is Secular Humanism". So, this determination was left up to local school boards. The provision provoked a storm of controversy which within a year led Senator Hatch to propose, and Congress to pass, an amendment to delete from the statute all reference to secular humanism. While this episode did not dissuade fundamentalists from continuing to object to what they regarded as the "teaching of Secular Humanism", it did point out the vagueness of the claim.

Case law edit

Torcaso v. Watkins edit

The phrase "secular humanism" became prominent after it was used in the United States Supreme Court case Torcaso v. Watkins. In the 1961 decision, Justice Hugo Black commented in a footnote, "Among religions in this country which do not teach what would generally be considered a belief in the existence of God are Buddhism, Taoism, Ethical Culture, Secular Humanism, and others."

Fellowship of Humanity v. County of Alameda edit

The footnote in Torcaso v. Watkins referenced Fellowship of Humanity v. County of Alameda,[66] a 1957 case in which an organization of humanists[67] sought a tax exemption on the ground that they used their property "solely and exclusively for religious worship." Despite the group's non-theistic beliefs, the court determined that the activities of the Fellowship of Humanity, which included weekly Sunday meetings, were analogous to the activities of theistic churches and thus entitled to an exemption. The Fellowship of Humanity case itself referred to Humanism but did not mention the term secular humanism. Nonetheless, this case was cited by Justice Black to justify the inclusion of secular humanism in the list of religions in his note. Presumably Justice Black added the word secular to emphasize the non-theistic nature of the Fellowship of Humanity and distinguish their brand of humanism from that associated with, for example, Christian humanism.

Washington Ethical Society v. District of Columbia edit

Another case alluded to in the Torcaso v. Watkins footnote, and said by some to have established secular humanism as a religion under the law, is the 1957 tax case of Washington Ethical Society v. District of Columbia, 249 F.2d 127 (D.C. Cir. 1957). The Washington Ethical Society functions much like a church, but regards itself as a non-theistic religious institution, honoring the importance of ethical living without mandating a belief in a supernatural origin for ethics. The case involved denial of the Society's application for tax exemption as a religious organization. The U.S. Court of Appeals reversed the Tax Court's ruling, defined the Society as a religious organization, and granted its tax exemption. The Society terms its practice Ethical Culture. Though Ethical Culture is based on a humanist philosophy, it is regarded by some as a type of religious humanism. Hence, it would seem most accurate to say that this case affirmed that a religion need not be theistic to qualify as a religion under the law, rather than asserting that it established generic secular humanism as a religion.

In the cases of both the Fellowship of Humanity and the Washington Ethical Society, the court decisions turned not so much on the particular beliefs of practitioners as on the function and form of the practice being similar to the function and form of the practices in other religious institutions.

Peloza v. Capistrano School District edit

The implication in Justice Black's footnote that secular humanism is a religion has been seized upon by religious opponents of the teaching of evolution, who have made the argument that teaching evolution amounts to teaching a religious idea. The claim that secular humanism could be considered a religion for legal purposes was examined by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Peloza v. Capistrano School District, 37 F.3d 517 (9th Cir. 1994), cert. denied, 515 U.S. 1173 (1995). In this case, a science teacher argued that, by requiring him to teach evolution, his school district was forcing him to teach the "religion" of secular humanism. The Court responded, "We reject this claim because neither the Supreme Court, nor this circuit, has ever held that evolutionism or Secular Humanism are 'religions' for Establishment Clause purposes." The Supreme Court refused to review the case.

The decision in a subsequent case, Kalka v. Hawk et al., offered this commentary:[67]

The Court's statement in Torcaso does not stand for the proposition that humanism, no matter in what form and no matter how practiced, amounts to a religion under the First Amendment. The Court offered no test for determining what system of beliefs qualified as a "religion" under the First Amendment. The most one may read into the Torcaso footnote is the idea that a particular non-theistic group calling itself the "Fellowship of Humanity" qualified as a religious organization under California law.

Controversy edit

Decisions about tax status have been based on whether an organization functions like a church. On the other hand, Establishment Clause cases turn on whether the ideas or symbols involved are inherently religious. An organization can function like a church while advocating beliefs that are not necessarily inherently religious. Author Marci Hamilton has pointed out: "Moreover, the debate is not between secularists and the religious. The debate is believers and non-believers on the one side debating believers and non-believers on the other side. You've got citizens who are [...] of faith who believe in the separation of church and state and you have a set of believers who do not believe in the separation of church and state."[68]

In the 1987 case of Smith v. Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County a group of plaintiffs brought a case alleging that the school system was teaching the tenets of an anti-religious religion called "secular humanism" in violation of the Establishment Clause. The complainants asked that 44 different elementary through high school level textbooks (including books on home economics, social science and literature) be removed from the curriculum. Federal judge William Brevard Hand ruled for the plaintiffs agreeing that the books promoted secular humanism, which he ruled to be a religion. The Eleventh Circuit Court unanimously reversed him, with Judge Frank stating that Hand held a "misconception of the relationship between church and state mandated by the establishment clause," commenting also that the textbooks did not show "an attitude antagonistic to theistic belief. The message conveyed by these textbooks is one of neutrality: the textbooks neither endorse theistic religion as a system of belief, nor discredit it".[69]

Notable humanists edit

Manifestos edit

There are numerous Humanist Manifestos and Declarations, including the following:

  • Humanist Manifesto I (1933)
  • Humanist Manifesto II (1973)
  • A Secular Humanist Declaration (1980)
  • A Declaration of Interdependence (1988)
  • IHEU Minimum Statement on Humanism (1996)
  • HUMANISM: Why, What, and What For, in 882 Words (1996)
  • Humanist Manifesto 2000: A Call for a New Planetary Humanism (2000)
  • The Affirmations of Humanism: A Statement of Principles
  • Amsterdam Declaration (2002)
  • Humanism and Its Aspirations: Humanist Manifesto III, a Successor to the Humanist Manifesto of 1933 (2003)
  • Alternatives to the Ten Commandments

Related organizations edit

See also edit

Wikibooks edit

  • Thinking And Moral Problems
  • Religions And Their Source
  • Purpose
  • Developing A Universal Religion, four parts of a Wikibook

Notes and references edit

  1. ^ Council for Secular Humanism. . Archived from the original on 12 May 2015. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  2. ^ a b Edwords, Fred (1989). . American Humanist Association. Archived from the original on 30 January 2010. Retrieved 19 August 2009. Secular Humanism is an outgrowth of eighteenth century enlightenment rationalism and nineteenth century freethought... A decidedly anti-theistic version of secular humanism, however, is developed by Adolf Grünbaum, 'In Defense of Secular Humanism' (1995), in his Collected Works (edited by Thomas Kupka), vol. I, New York: Oxford University Press 2013, ch. 6 (pp. 115–48)
  3. ^ a b Compact Oxford English dictionary. Oxford University Press. 2007. humanism n. 1 a rationalistic system of thought attaching prime importance to human rather than divine or supernatural matters.
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  5. ^ See "Unemployed at service: church and the world", The Guardian, 25 May 1935, p. 18: citing the comments of Rev. W.G. Peck, rector of St. John the Baptist, Hulme Manchester, concerning "The modern age of secular humanism". Guardian and Observer Digital Archive
  6. ^ "Free Church ministers in Anglican pulpits. Dr Temple's call: the South India Scheme." The Guardian, 26 May 1943, p. 6 Guardian and Observer Digital Archive
  7. ^ See Mouat, Kit (1972) An Introduction to Secular Humanism. Haywards Heath: Charles Clarke Ltd. Also, The Freethinker began to use the phrase "secular humanist monthly" on its front page masthead.
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  9. ^ Humanism Unmodified 5 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine By Edd Doerr. Published in the Humanist (November/December 2002)
  10. ^ "Capitalization [of Humanism] is not mandatory... It is recommended usage and the normal usage within IHEU"—Jeremy Webbs, IHEU webmaster, from a response to a Wikipedia editor inquiry, dated 2 March 2006.
  11. ^ a b Humanism is Eight Letters, No More—endorsed by Harold John Blackham, Levi Fragell, Corliss Lamont, Harry Stopes-Roe and Rob Tielman.
  12. ^ "Islamic political philosophy: Al-Farabi, Avicenna, Averroes". Fordham.edu. Retrieved 13 November 2011.
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  32. ^ Wilson, Edwin H. (1995). The Genesis of a Humanist Manifesto. Amherst, NY: Humanist Press. This book quotes the constitution of the Humanistic Religious Association of London, founded in 1853, as saying, "In forming ourselves into a progressive religious body, we have adopted the name 'Humanistic Religious Association' to convey the idea that Religion is a principle inherent in man and is a means of developing his being towards greater perfection. We have emancipated ourselves from the ancient compulsory dogmas, myths and ceremonies borrowed of old from Asia and still pervading the ruling churches of our age".
  33. ^ Kurtz, Paul (1995). Living Without Religion: Eupraxophy. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books. p. 8.
  34. ^ Eugenie C. Scott, National Centre for Science and Education, "Science and Religion, Methodology and Humanism": "science must be limited to using just natural forces in its explanations.This is sometimes referred to as the principle of methodological materialism in science ... Scientists use only methodological materialism because it is logical, but primarily because it works. We don't need to use supernatural forces to explain nature, and we get farther in our understanding of nature by relying on natural causes."
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  36. ^ Norman, Richard (2004). On Humanism. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780415305228.
  37. ^ Theodore Schick, Jr (29 July 2005). "Morality Requires God ... or Does It?". Secularhumanism.org. Retrieved 12 December 2020.
  38. ^ Copson, Andrew; Roberts, Alice (2020). The Little Book of Humanism. Piaktus. pp. 94–95. Every time we have to make a difficult moral choice, there will be something new and different about it. So applying the same rule every time is not going to work. It doesn't mean our values have changed. It's more that the situations in which we apply them are different – and so we make different choices in practice.
    This requires careful thought. Sometimes, we might find we've settled into ways of thinking that mean we're applying rules, even if those are own rules. We need to challenge ourselves – not just acting on what seems like instinct or intuition but going back to thinking carefully about consequences and virtues again.
  39. ^ Yam, Kimberly (9 August 2018). "Kristen Bell Drops Some Ethical Gems She Learned On 'The Good Place'". Retrieved 1 February 2021.
  40. ^ Baggini, Julian (2003). Atheism: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 3–4. ISBN 0-19-280424-3. The atheist's rejection of belief in God is usually accompanied by a broader rejection of any supernatural or transcendental reality. For example, an atheist does not usually believe in the existence of immortal souls, life after death, ghosts, or supernatural powers. Although strictly speaking an atheist could believe in any of these things and still remain an atheist... the arguments and ideas that sustain atheism tend naturally to rule out other beliefs in the supernatural or transcendental.
  41. ^ Winston, Robert, ed. (2004). Human. New York: DK Publishing, Inc. p. 299. ISBN 0-7566-1901-7. Neither atheism nor agnosticism is a full belief system, because they have no fundamental philosophy or lifestyle requirements. These forms of thought are simply the absence of belief in, or denial of, the existence of deities.
  42. ^ Paul Kurtz; Vern L. Bullough; Tim Madigan (19 October 2009). Toward a New Enlightenment: the Philosophy of Paul Kurtz. Transaction Books. ISBN 978-1-56000-118-8. In the past, the Communist Party of the Soviet Union waged unremitting warfare against religion. It persecuted religious believers, confiscated church properties, executed or exiled tens of thousands of clerics, and prohibited believers to engage in religious instruction or publish religious materials. It has also carried on militant pro-atheist propaganda campaigns as part of the official ideology of the state, in an effort to establish a "new Soviet man" committed to the ideals of Communist society. Mikhail Gorbachev is dismantling such policies by permitting greater freedom of religious conscience. If his reforms proceed unabated, they could have dramatic implications for the entire Communist world, for the Russians may be moving from militant atheism to tolerant humanism.
  43. ^ Paul Kurtz; Vern L. Bullough; Tim Madigan (19 October 2009). Toward a New Enlightenment: the Philosophy of Paul Kurtz. Transaction Books. ISBN 978-1-56000-118-8. Ranged against the true believer are the militant atheists, who adamantly reject the faith as false stupid, and reactionary. They consider all religious believers to be gullible fools and claim that they are given to accepting gross exaggerations and untenable premises. Historic religious claims, they think, are totally implausible, unbelievable, disreputable, and controvertible, for they go beyond the bounds of reason. Militant atheists can find no value at all to any religious beliefs or institutions. They resist any effort to engage in inquiry or debate. Madalyn Murray O'Hair is as arrogant in her rejection of religion as is the true believer in his or her profession of faith. This form of atheism thus becomes mere dogma.
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Further reading edit

  • Bullock, Alan. The Humanist Tradition in the West (1985), by a leading historian.
  • Coleman, T. J. III, (interviewer), Tom Flynn (interviewee) (2014, January), "Tom Flynn on 'Secular Humanism'", The Religious Studies Project Podcast Series
  • Friess, Horace L., Felix Adler and Ethical Culture (1981).
  • Pfeffer, Leo. "The 'Religion' of Secular Humanism", Journal of Church and State, Summer 1987, Vol. 29 Issue 3, pp. 495–507
  • Radest, Howard B. The Devil and Secular Humanism: The Children of the Enlightenment (1990) – a favorable account
  • Toumey, Christopher P. "Evolution and secular humanism", Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Summer 1993, Vol. 61 Issue 2, pp. 275–301, focused on fundamentalist attacks.
  • Pinker, Steven Enlightenment Now: The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress (2018), Penguin Books

Primary sources edit

  • Adler, Felix. An Ethical Philosophy of Life (1918).
  • Ericson, Edward L. The Humanist Way: An introduction to ethical humanist religion (1988). ISBN 978-0804421768
  • Frankel, Charles. The Case for Modern Man (1956). ISBN 978-1199637154
  • Hook, Sidney. Out of Step: An Unquiet Life in the 20th century (1987). ISBN 978-0060156329
  • Huxley, Julian. Essay of a Humanist (1964).
  • Russell, Bertrand. Why I Am Not a Christian (1957).

secular, humanism, philosophy, belief, system, life, stance, that, embraces, human, reason, logic, secular, ethics, philosophical, naturalism, while, specifically, rejecting, religious, dogma, supernaturalism, superstition, basis, morality, decision, making, p. Secular humanism is a philosophy belief system or life stance that embraces human reason logic secular ethics and philosophical naturalism while specifically rejecting religious dogma supernaturalism and superstition as the basis of morality and decision making 1 2 3 4 Secular humanism posits that human beings are capable of being ethical and moral without religion or belief in a deity It does not however assume that humans are either inherently good or evil nor does it present humans as being superior to nature Rather the humanist life stance emphasizes the unique responsibility facing humanity and the ethical consequences of human decisions Fundamental to the concept of secular humanism is the strongly held viewpoint that ideology be it religious or political must be thoroughly examined by each individual and not simply accepted or rejected on faith Along with this an essential part of secular humanism is a continually adapting search for truth primarily through science and philosophy Many secular humanists derive their moral codes from a philosophy of utilitarianism ethical naturalism or evolutionary ethics and some advocate a science of morality Humanists International founded by Julian Huxley and Jaap van Praag is the world union of more than one hundred humanist rationalist irreligious atheist Bright secular Ethical Culture and freethought organizations in more than 40 countries The Happy Human is recognized as the official symbol of humanism internationally used by secular humanist organizations in every part of the world The term itself is not uncontested Secular humanism is not a universally used phrase and is most prevalent in the United States Most member organisations of Humanists International for example use simply the term humanism to refer to this concept with some commentators remarking that hyphenated humanism easily becomes more about the adjective than its referent Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 Secularism 2 2 Positivism and the Church of Humanity 2 3 Ethical movement 2 4 Secular humanism 3 Manifestos and declarations 3 1 International Humanist and Ethical Union 3 2 Council for Secular Humanism 3 3 American Humanist Association 4 Ethics and relationship to religious belief 5 Modern context 6 Humanist celebrations 7 Legal mentions in the United States 7 1 Hatch amendment 7 2 Case law 7 2 1 Torcaso v Watkins 7 2 2 Fellowship of Humanity v County of Alameda 7 2 3 Washington Ethical Society v District of Columbia 7 2 4 Peloza v Capistrano School District 7 3 Controversy 8 Notable humanists 9 Manifestos 10 Related organizations 11 See also 11 1 Wikibooks 12 Notes and references 13 Further reading 13 1 Primary sourcesTerminology editThe meaning of the phrase secular humanism has evolved over time The phrase has been used since at least the 1930s by Anglican priests 5 and in 1943 the then Archbishop of Canterbury William Temple was reported as warning that the Christian tradition was in danger of being undermined by a Secular Humanism which hoped to retain Christian values without Christian faith 6 During the 1960s and 1970s the term was embraced by some humanists who considered themselves anti religious 7 as well as those who although not critical of religion in its various guises preferred a non religious approach 8 The release in 1980 of A Secular Humanist Declaration by the newly formed Council for Democratic and Secular Humanism CODESH later the Council for Secular Humanism which with CSICOP in 1991 jointly formed the Center for Inquiry and in 2015 both ceased separate operations becoming CFI programs gave secular humanism an organisational identity within the United States but no overall organisation involved currently uses a name featuring secular humanism However many adherents of the approach reject the use of the word secular as obfuscating and confusing and consider that the term secular humanism has been demonized by the religious right All too often secular humanism is reduced to a sterile outlook consisting of little more than secularism slightly broadened by academic ethics This kind of hyphenated humanism easily becomes more about the adjective than its referent 9 Adherents of this view including Humanists International and the American Humanist Association consider that the unmodified but capitalized word Humanism should be used The endorsement by the International Humanist and Ethical Union IHEU of the capitalization of the word Humanism and the dropping of any adjective such as secular is quite recent The American Humanist Association began to adopt this view in 1973 and the IHEU formally endorsed the position in 1989 In 2002 the IHEU General Assembly unanimously adopted the Amsterdam Declaration which represents the official defining statement of World Humanism for Humanists This declaration makes exclusive use of capitalized Humanist and Humanism which is consistent with IHEU s general practice and recommendations for promoting a unified Humanist identity 10 unreliable source To further promote Humanist identity these words are also free of any adjectives as recommended by prominent members of IHEU 11 Such usage is not universal among IHEU member organizations though most of them do observe these conventions History editHistorical use of the term humanism reflected in some current academic usage is related to the writings of pre Socratic philosophers These writings were lost to European societies until Renaissance scholars rediscovered them through Muslim sources and translated them from Arabic into European languages 12 Thus the term humanist can mean a humanities scholar as well as refer to The Enlightenment Renaissance intellectuals and those who have agreement with the pre Socratics as distinct from secular humanists Secularism edit nbsp George Holyoake coined the term secularism and led the secular movement in Britain from the mid 19th century In 1851 George Holyoake coined the term secularism 13 to describe a form of opinion which concerns itself only with questions the issues of which can be tested by the experience of this life 14 The modern secular movement coalesced around Holyoake Charles Bradlaugh and their intellectual circle The first secular society the Leicester Secular Society dates from 1851 Similar regional societies came together to form the National Secular Society in 1866 Positivism and the Church of Humanity edit Holyoake s secularism was strongly influenced by Auguste Comte the founder of positivism and of modern sociology Comte believed human history would progress in a law of three stages from a theological phase to the metaphysical toward a fully rational positivist society In later life Comte had attempted to introduce a religion of humanity in light of growing anti religious sentiment and social malaise in revolutionary France This religion would necessarily fulfil the functional cohesive role that supernatural religion once served Although Comte s religious movement was unsuccessful in France the positivist philosophy of science itself played a major role in the proliferation of secular organizations in the 19th century in England Richard Congreve visited Paris shortly after the French Revolution of 1848 where he met Auguste Comte and was heavily influenced by his positivist system He founded the London Positivist Society in 1867 which attracted Frederic Harrison Edward Spencer Beesly Vernon Lushington and James Cotter Morison amongst others In 1878 the Society established the Church of Humanity under Congreve s direction There they introduced sacraments of the Religion of Humanity and published a co operative translation of Comte s Positive Polity When Congreve repudiated their Paris co religionists in 1878 Beesly Harrison Bridges and others formed their own positivist society with Beesly as president and opened a rival centre Newton Hall in a courtyard off Fleet Street The New York City version of the church was established by English immigrant Henry Edger The American version of the Church of Humanity was largely modeled on the English church Like the English version it was not atheistic and had sermons and sacramental rites 15 At times the services included readings from conventional religious works like the Book of Isaiah 16 It was not as significant as the church in England but did include several educated people 17 Ethical movement edit nbsp Conway Hall in London Another important precursor was the ethical movement of the 19th century The South Place Ethical Society was founded in 1793 as the South Place Chapel on Finsbury Square on the edge of the City of London 18 and in the early nineteenth century was known as a radical gathering place 19 At that point it was a Unitarian chapel and that movement like Quakers supported female equality 20 Under the leadership of Reverend William Johnson Fox 21 it lent its pulpit to activists such as Anna Wheeler one of the first women to campaign for feminism at public meetings in England who spoke in 1829 on rights of women In later decades the chapel changed its name to the South Place Ethical Society now the Conway Hall Ethical Society Today Conway Hall explicitly identifies itself as a humanist organisation albeit one primarily focused on concerts events and the maintenance of its humanist library and archives It bills itself as The landmark of London s independent intellectual political and cultural life In America the ethical movement was propounded by Felix Adler who established the New York Society for Ethical Culture in 1877 22 By 1886 similar societies had sprouted up in Philadelphia Chicago and St Louis 23 These societies all adopted the same statement of principles The belief that morality is independent of theology The affirmation that new moral problems have arisen in modern industrial society which have not been adequately dealt with by the world s religions The duty to engage in philanthropy in the advancement of morality The belief that self reform should go in lock step with social reform The establishment of republican rather than monarchical governance of Ethical societies The agreement that educating the young is the most important aim In effect the movement responded to the religious crisis of the time by replacing theology with unadulterated morality It aimed to disentangle moral ideas from religious doctrines metaphysical systems and ethical theories and to make them an independent force in personal life and social relations 23 Adler was also particularly critical of the religious emphasis on creed believing it to be the source of sectarian bigotry He therefore attempted to provide a universal fellowship devoid of ritual and ceremony for those who would otherwise be divided by creeds Although the organisation was overwhelmingly made up of and entirely led by atheists and were many of the same people as in the secular movement Ethical organisations at that time publicly avoided debate about religious beliefs publicly advocating neither atheism nor theism agnosticism nor deism instead stressing deed without creed and a purely human basis for morality 23 The first ethical society along these lines in Britain was founded in 1886 By 1896 the four London societies formed the Union of Ethical Societies and between 1905 and 1910 there were over fifty societies in Great Britain seventeen of which were affiliated with the Union The Union of Ethical Societies would later incorporate as the Ethical Union a registered charity in 1928 Under the leadership of Harold Blackham it renamed itself the British Humanist Association in 1967 It became the Humanists UK in 2017 Secular humanism edit In the 1930s humanism was generally used in a religious sense by the Ethical movement in the United States and not much favoured among the non religious in Britain Yet it was from the Ethical movement that the non religious philosophical sense of Humanism gradually emerged in Britain and it was from the convergence of the Ethical and Rationalist movements that this sense of Humanism eventually prevailed throughout the Freethought movement 24 As an organised movement in its own right humanism emerged from vibrant non religious movements of the 18th and 19th centuries such as the Owenites Ethical Culture the freethinkers secularists and positivists as well as a few non religious radical Unitarian congregations The first Humanist Manifesto announced the humanist movement by that name to the public in 1933 following work at the University of Chicago across the 1920s 25 The American Humanist Association was incorporated as an Illinois non profit organization in 1943 The International Humanist and Ethical Union was founded in 1952 when a gathering of world Humanists met under the leadership of Sir Julian Huxley The British Humanist Association took that name in 1967 but had developed from the Union of Ethical Societies which had been founded by Stanton Coit in 1896 26 Manifestos and declarations edit nbsp Organizations like Humanists International use the Happy Human symbol based on a 1965 design by Denis Barrington Humanists have put together various Humanist Manifestos in attempts to unify the Humanist identity The original signers of the first Humanist Manifesto of 1933 declared themselves to be religious humanists Because in their view traditional religions were failing to meet the needs of their day the signers of 1933 declared it a necessity to establish a religion that was a dynamic force to meet the needs of the day However this religion did not profess a belief in any god Since then two additional Manifestos were written to replace the first In the Preface of Humanist Manifesto II in 1973 the authors Paul Kurtz and Edwin H Wilson assert that faith and knowledge are required for a hopeful vision for the future Manifesto II references a section on religion and states traditional religion renders a disservice to humanity Manifesto II recognizes the following groups to be part of their naturalistic philosophy scientific ethical democratic religious and Marxist humanism International Humanist and Ethical Union edit In 2002 the IHEU General Assembly unanimously adopted the Amsterdam Declaration 2002 which represents the official defining statement of World Humanism 27 All member organisations of the International Humanist and Ethical Union are required by bylaw 5 1 28 to accept the Minimum Statement on Humanism Humanism is a democratic and ethical life stance which affirms that human beings have the right and responsibility to give meaning and shape to their own lives It stands for the building of a more humane society through an ethic based on human and other natural values in the spirit of reason and free inquiry through human capabilities It is not theistic and it does not accept supernatural views of reality To promote and unify Humanist identity prominent members of the IHEU have endorsed the following statements on Humanist identity 11 All Humanists nationally and internationally should always use the one word Humanism as the name of Humanism no added adjective and the initial letter capital by life stance orthography All Humanists nationally and internationally should use a clear recognizable and uniform symbol on their publications and elsewhere our Humanist symbol the Happy Human All Humanists nationally and internationally should seek to establish recognition of the fact that Humanism is a life stance Council for Secular Humanism edit According to the Council for Secular Humanism within the United States the term secular humanism describes a world view with the following elements and principles 8 Need to test beliefs A conviction that dogmas ideologies and traditions whether religious political or social must be weighed and tested by each individual and not simply accepted by faith Reason evidence scientific method A commitment to the use of critical reason factual evidence and scientific method of inquiry in seeking solutions to human problems and answers to important human questions Fulfillment growth creativity A primary concern with fulfillment growth and creativity for both the individual and humankind in general Search for truth A constant search for objective truth with the understanding that new knowledge and experience constantly alter our imperfect perception of it This life A concern for this life as opposed to an afterlife and a commitment to making it meaningful through better understanding of ourselves our history our intellectual and artistic achievements and the outlooks of those who differ from us Ethics A search for viable individual social and political principles of ethical conduct judging them on their ability to enhance human well being and individual responsibility Justice and fairness an interest in securing justice and fairness in society and in eliminating discrimination and intolerance 29 Building a better world A conviction that with reason an open exchange of ideas good will and tolerance progress can be made in building a better world for ourselves and our children A Secular Humanist Declaration was issued in 1980 by the Council for Secular Humanism s predecessor CODESH It lays out ten ideals Free inquiry as opposed to censorship and imposition of belief separation of church and state the ideal of freedom from religious control and from jingoistic government control ethics based on critical intelligence rather than that deduced from religious belief moral education religious skepticism reason a belief in science and technology as the best way of understanding the world evolution and education as the essential method of building humane free and democratic societies 30 American Humanist Association edit A general outline of Humanism is also set out in the Humanist Manifesto prepared by the American Humanist Association 31 Ethics and relationship to religious belief editSee also Secular ethics In the 20th and 21st centuries members of Humanist organizations have disagreed as to whether Humanism is a religion They categorize themselves in one of three ways Religious or ethical humanism in the tradition of the earliest humanist organizations in the UK and US attempts to fulfil the traditional social role of religion Contemporary use of the word religious did not have the same connotations as its today 32 Secular humanism considers all forms of religion including religious humanism to be superseded 33 However distinctions between ethical and secular humanists are for the most part historical and practically meaningless in the present day or to contemporary individuals who identify with humanism Since the mid 20th century the development of new concepts such as the life stance which encompasses both humanist views and religious outlooks has defused this conflict Most humanist organisations identify with humanism without a pre modifier such a secular or ethical and assert humanism as a non religious philosophy or approach to life Generally speaking all humanists including religious humanists reject deference to supernatural beliefs promote the practical methodological naturalism of science and largely endorse the stance of metaphysical naturalism 34 The result is an approach to issues in a secular way Humanism addresses ethics without reference to the supernatural as well attesting that ethics is a human enterprise see naturalistic ethics 2 3 4 Accounts of humanism are also careful not to treat secular humanism analogously with religions which implies a community who strictly attempt to adhere to the same obligations or beliefs Holding a secular humanist philosophy does not prescribe a specific theory of morality or code of ethics As stated by the Council for Secular Humanism Secular Humanism is not so much a specific morality as it is a method for the explanation and discovery of rational moral principles 35 Secular humanists affirm that with the present state of scientific knowledge dogmatic belief in an absolutist moral or ethical system e g Kantian Islamic Christian is unreasonable However it affirms that individuals engaging in rational moral ethical deliberations can discover some universal objective standards We are opposed to absolutist morality yet we maintain that objective standards emerge and ethical values and principles may be discovered in the course of ethical deliberation 35 Many humanists adopt principles of the Golden Rule Some believe that universal moral standards are required for the proper functioning of society However they believe such necessary universality can and should be achieved by developing a richer notion of morality through reason experience and scientific inquiry rather than through faith in a supernatural realm or source 36 Fundamentalists correctly perceive that universal moral standards are required for the proper functioning of society But they erroneously believe that God is the only possible source of such standards Philosophers as diverse as Plato Immanuel Kant John Stuart Mill George Edward Moore and John Rawls have demonstrated that it is possible to have a universal morality without God Contrary to what the fundamentalists would have us believe then what our society really needs is not more religion but a richer notion of the nature of morality 37 Humanists Andrew Copson and Alice Roberts in their casual introduction to humanism The Little Book of Humanism propose that a distinctive aspect of humanist morality is its recognition that every moral situation is in some sense unique and so potentially calls for different approach than the last i e the ability to vacillate situationally between consequentialism and virtue ethics 38 In the book they quote from Kristen Bell s advocacy of moral particularism as developed by Jonathan Dancy 39 Humanism is compatible with atheism and by definition usually entails at least a form of weak or agnostic atheism 40 and agnosticism 41 but being atheist or agnostic does not automatically make one a humanist Nevertheless humanism is diametrically opposed to state atheism 42 43 According to Paul Kurtz considered by some to be the founder of the American secular humanist movement 44 one of the differences between Marxist Leninist atheists and humanists is the latter s commitment to human freedom and democracy while stating that the militant atheism of the Soviet Union consistently violated basic human rights 45 Kurtz also stated that the defense of religious liberty is as precious to the humanist as are the rights of the believers 45 Greg M Epstein states that modern organized Humanism began in the minds of its founders as nothing more nor less than a religion without a God 46 Many humanists address ethics from the point of view of ethical naturalism and some support an actual science of morality 47 Modern context edit nbsp David Niose president of the American Humanist Association speaks at a 2012 conference Secular humanist organizations are found in all parts of the world Those who call themselves humanists are estimated to number between four 48 failed verification and five 49 dubious discuss million people worldwide in 31 countries but there is uncertainty because of the lack of universal definition throughout censuses Humanism is a non theistic belief system and as such it could be a sub category of Religion only if that term is defined to mean Religion and any belief system This is the case in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights on freedom of religion and beliefs Many national censuses contentiously define Humanism as a further sub category of the sub category No Religion which typically includes atheist rationalist and agnostic thought In England Wales 50 25 of people specify that they have No religion up from 15 in 2001 and in Australia 51 around 30 of the population specifies No Religion in the national census In the US the decennial census does not inquire about religious affiliation or its lack surveys report the figure at roughly 13 52 In the 2001 Canadian census 16 5 of the populace reported having no religious affiliation 53 In the 2011 Scottish census 37 stated they had no religion up from 28 in 2001 54 One of the largest Humanist organizations in the world relative to population is Norway s Human Etisk Forbund 55 which had over 86 000 members out of a population of around 4 6 million in 2013 approximately 2 of the population 56 nbsp Levi Fragell former Secretary General of the Norwegian Humanist Association and former president of the International Humanist and Ethical Union at the World Humanist Congress 2011 in Oslo The International Humanist and Ethical Union IHEU is the worldwide umbrella organization for those adhering to the Humanist life stance It represents the views of over three million Humanists organized in over 100 national organizations in 30 countries 57 Originally based in the Netherlands the IHEU now operates from London Some regional groups that adhere to variants of the Humanist life stance such as the humanist subgroup of the Unitarian Universalist Association do not belong to the IHEU Although the European Humanist Federation is also separate from the IHEU the two organisations work together and share an agreed protocol 58 Starting in the mid 20th century religious fundamentalists and the religious right began using the term secular humanism in hostile fashion Francis A Schaeffer an American theologian based in Switzerland seizing upon the exclusion of the divine from most humanist writings argued that rampant secular humanism would lead to moral relativism and ethical bankruptcy in his book How Should We Then Live The Rise and Decline of Western Thought and Culture 1976 Schaeffer portrayed secular humanism as pernicious and diabolical and warned it would undermine the moral and spiritual tablet of America His themes have been very widely repeated in Fundamentalist preaching in North America 59 Toumey 1993 found that secular humanism is typically portrayed as a vast evil conspiracy deceitful and immoral responsible for feminism pornography abortion homosexuality and New Age spirituality 60 In certain areas of the world Humanism finds itself in conflict with religious fundamentalism especially over the issue of the separation of church and state Many Humanists see religions as superstitious repressive and closed minded while religious fundamentalists may see Humanists as a threat to the values set out in their sacred texts 61 In recent years humanists such as Dwight Gilbert Jones and R Joseph Hoffmann have decried the over association of Humanism with affirmations of non belief and atheism Jones cites a lack of new ideas being presented or debated outside of secularism 62 while Hoffmann is unequivocal I regard the use of the term humanism to mean secular humanism or atheism to be one of the greatest tragedies of twentieth century movementology perpetrated by second class minds and perpetuated by third class polemicists and village atheists The attempt to sever humanism from the religious and the spiritual was a flatfooted largely American way of taking on the religious right It lacked finesse subtlety and the European sense of history 63 Humanist celebrations editHumanism as a term which describes a person s non religious views comes with no obligation to celebrate or revere specific days in the year as a religion would As a result individual humanists choose of their own accord whether to take part in prevailing national holidays where they live For example humanists in Europe and North America typically celebrate holidays such as Christmas but as secular holidays rather than Christian festivals 64 Other humanists choose to mark the winter and summer solstice and the equinoxes European humanists may often emphasise the fact that human beings have found reasons to celebrate at these times in the Northern Hemisphere for thousands of years before the arrival of Christianity 65 Humanists may also identify culturally with religious traditions and holidays celebrated in their family in the community For example humanists with a Jewish identity will often celebrate most Jewish holidays in a secular manner Humanists International endorses World Humanist Day 21 June Darwin Day 12 February Human Rights Day 10 December and HumanLight 23 December as official days of humanist celebration though none are yet a public holiday Humanist organisations typically organise events around these dates which draw attention to their programmes of activities In many countries humanist celebrants officiants perform celebrancy services for weddings funerals child namings coming of age ceremonies and other rituals In countries like Scotland and Norway these are extremely popular In Scotland more people have a humanist wedding than are married by any religious denomination including Scotland s largest churches over 20 of Scottish weddings are humanist In Norway over 20 of young people choose humanist coming of age ceremonies every year Legal mentions in the United States editThe issue of whether and in what sense secular humanism might be considered a religion and what the implications of this would be has become the subject of legal maneuvering and political debate in the United States The first reference to secular humanism in a US legal context was in 1961 although church state separation lawyer Leo Pfeffer had referred to it in his 1958 book Creeds in Competition Hatch amendment edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Secular humanism news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2020 Learn how and when to remove this message The Education for Economic Security Act of 1984 included a section Section 20 U S C A 4059 which initially read Grants under this subchapter Magnet School Assistance may not be used for consultants for transportation or for any activity which does not augment academic improvement With no public notice Senator Orrin Hatch tacked onto the proposed exclusionary subsection the words or for any course of instruction the substance of which is Secular Humanism Implementation of this provision ran into practical problems because neither the Senator s staff nor the Senate s Committee on Labor and Human Resources nor the Department of Justice could propose a definition of what would constitute a course of instruction the substance of which is Secular Humanism So this determination was left up to local school boards The provision provoked a storm of controversy which within a year led Senator Hatch to propose and Congress to pass an amendment to delete from the statute all reference to secular humanism While this episode did not dissuade fundamentalists from continuing to object to what they regarded as the teaching of Secular Humanism it did point out the vagueness of the claim Case law edit Torcaso v Watkins edit The phrase secular humanism became prominent after it was used in the United States Supreme Court case Torcaso v Watkins In the 1961 decision Justice Hugo Black commented in a footnote Among religions in this country which do not teach what would generally be considered a belief in the existence of God are Buddhism Taoism Ethical Culture Secular Humanism and others Fellowship of Humanity v County of Alameda edit The footnote in Torcaso v Watkins referenced Fellowship of Humanity v County of Alameda 66 a 1957 case in which an organization of humanists 67 sought a tax exemption on the ground that they used their property solely and exclusively for religious worship Despite the group s non theistic beliefs the court determined that the activities of the Fellowship of Humanity which included weekly Sunday meetings were analogous to the activities of theistic churches and thus entitled to an exemption The Fellowship of Humanity case itself referred to Humanism but did not mention the term secular humanism Nonetheless this case was cited by Justice Black to justify the inclusion of secular humanism in the list of religions in his note Presumably Justice Black added the word secular to emphasize the non theistic nature of the Fellowship of Humanity and distinguish their brand of humanism from that associated with for example Christian humanism Washington Ethical Society v District of Columbia edit Another case alluded to in the Torcaso v Watkins footnote and said by some to have established secular humanism as a religion under the law is the 1957 tax case of Washington Ethical Society v District of Columbia 249 F 2d 127 D C Cir 1957 The Washington Ethical Society functions much like a church but regards itself as a non theistic religious institution honoring the importance of ethical living without mandating a belief in a supernatural origin for ethics The case involved denial of the Society s application for tax exemption as a religious organization The U S Court of Appeals reversed the Tax Court s ruling defined the Society as a religious organization and granted its tax exemption The Society terms its practice Ethical Culture Though Ethical Culture is based on a humanist philosophy it is regarded by some as a type of religious humanism Hence it would seem most accurate to say that this case affirmed that a religion need not be theistic to qualify as a religion under the law rather than asserting that it established generic secular humanism as a religion In the cases of both the Fellowship of Humanity and the Washington Ethical Society the court decisions turned not so much on the particular beliefs of practitioners as on the function and form of the practice being similar to the function and form of the practices in other religious institutions Peloza v Capistrano School District edit The implication in Justice Black s footnote that secular humanism is a religion has been seized upon by religious opponents of the teaching of evolution who have made the argument that teaching evolution amounts to teaching a religious idea The claim that secular humanism could be considered a religion for legal purposes was examined by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Peloza v Capistrano School District 37 F 3d 517 9th Cir 1994 cert denied 515 U S 1173 1995 In this case a science teacher argued that by requiring him to teach evolution his school district was forcing him to teach the religion of secular humanism The Court responded We reject this claim because neither the Supreme Court nor this circuit has ever held that evolutionism or Secular Humanism are religions for Establishment Clause purposes The Supreme Court refused to review the case The decision in a subsequent case Kalka v Hawk et al offered this commentary 67 The Court s statement in Torcaso does not stand for the proposition that humanism no matter in what form and no matter how practiced amounts to a religion under the First Amendment The Court offered no test for determining what system of beliefs qualified as a religion under the First Amendment The most one may read into the Torcaso footnote is the idea that a particular non theistic group calling itself the Fellowship of Humanity qualified as a religious organization under California law Controversy edit Decisions about tax status have been based on whether an organization functions like a church On the other hand Establishment Clause cases turn on whether the ideas or symbols involved are inherently religious An organization can function like a church while advocating beliefs that are not necessarily inherently religious Author Marci Hamilton has pointed out Moreover the debate is not between secularists and the religious The debate is believers and non believers on the one side debating believers and non believers on the other side You ve got citizens who are of faith who believe in the separation of church and state and you have a set of believers who do not believe in the separation of church and state 68 In the 1987 case of Smith v Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County a group of plaintiffs brought a case alleging that the school system was teaching the tenets of an anti religious religion called secular humanism in violation of the Establishment Clause The complainants asked that 44 different elementary through high school level textbooks including books on home economics social science and literature be removed from the curriculum Federal judge William Brevard Hand ruled for the plaintiffs agreeing that the books promoted secular humanism which he ruled to be a religion The Eleventh Circuit Court unanimously reversed him with Judge Frank stating that Hand held a misconception of the relationship between church and state mandated by the establishment clause commenting also that the textbooks did not show an attitude antagonistic to theistic belief The message conveyed by these textbooks is one of neutrality the textbooks neither endorse theistic religion as a system of belief nor discredit it 69 Notable humanists editFurther information List of secular humanistsManifestos editThere are numerous Humanist Manifestos and Declarations including the following Humanist Manifesto I 1933 Humanist Manifesto II 1973 A Secular Humanist Declaration 1980 A Declaration of Interdependence 1988 IHEU Minimum Statement on Humanism 1996 HUMANISM Why What and What For in 882 Words 1996 Humanist Manifesto 2000 A Call for a New Planetary Humanism 2000 The Affirmations of Humanism A Statement of Principles Amsterdam Declaration 2002 Humanism and Its Aspirations Humanist Manifesto III a Successor to the Humanist Manifesto of 1933 2003 Alternatives to the Ten CommandmentsRelated organizations editSee also List of secularist organizations American Atheists American Humanist Association Brights Camp Quest Center for Inquiry City Congregation for Humanistic Judaism Committee for Skeptical Inquiry Council of Australian Humanist Societies Ethical Culture European Humanist Federation Federation of Indian Rationalist Associations Freedom From Religion Foundation Giordano Bruno Foundation Humanist Canada Humanist Association of Ireland Humanist Society of New Zealand Humanist Society Scotland Humanistischer Verband Deutschlands Humanists International Humanists UK Humanists Sweden Humanity Institute for Humanist Studies Internet Infidels Military Association of Atheists and Freethinkers National Center for Science Education New Zealand Association of Rationalists and Humanists Philippine Atheism Agnosticism and Secularism Incorporated Quackwatch Sapiens Foundation Scouting for All Secular Student Alliance Sidmennt Iceland The Skeptics Society Society for Humanistic JudaismSee also editEffective altruism Empiricism Epicureanism Eupraxsophy Extropianism Marxist humanism Morality without religion Naturalistic pantheism Nontheism Objectivism Rationalism Secular religion Skepticism Stoicism Transhumanism Wikibooks edit Thinking And Moral Problems Religions And Their Source Purpose Developing A Universal Religion four parts of a WikibookNotes and references edit Council for Secular Humanism 10 Myths About Secular Humanism Archived from the original on 12 May 2015 Retrieved 12 June 2015 a b Edwords Fred 1989 What Is Humanism American Humanist Association Archived from the original on 30 January 2010 Retrieved 19 August 2009 Secular Humanism is an outgrowth of eighteenth century enlightenment rationalism and nineteenth century freethought A decidedly anti theistic version of secular humanism however is developed by Adolf Grunbaum In Defense of Secular Humanism 1995 in his Collected Works edited by Thomas Kupka vol I New York Oxford University Press 2013 ch 6 pp 115 48 a b Compact Oxford English dictionary Oxford University Press 2007 humanism n 1 a rationalistic system of thought attaching prime importance to human rather than divine or supernatural matters a b Definitions of humanism subsection Institute for Humanist Studies Archived from the original on 18 January 2007 Retrieved 16 January 2007 See Unemployed at service church and the world The Guardian 25 May 1935 p 18 citing the comments of Rev W G Peck rector of St John the Baptist Hulme Manchester concerning The modern age of secular humanism Guardian and Observer Digital Archive Free Church ministers in Anglican pulpits Dr Temple s call the South India Scheme The Guardian 26 May 1943 p 6 Guardian and Observer Digital Archive See Mouat Kit 1972 An Introduction to Secular Humanism Haywards Heath Charles Clarke Ltd Also The Freethinker began to use the phrase secular humanist monthly on its front page masthead a b What Is Secular Humanism Council for Secular Humanism Archived from the original on 15 September 2011 Retrieved 2 October 2005 Humanism Unmodified Archived 5 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine By Edd Doerr Published in the Humanist November December 2002 Capitalization of Humanism is not mandatory It is recommended usage and the normal usage within IHEU Jeremy Webbs IHEU webmaster from a response to a Wikipedia editor inquiry dated 2 March 2006 a b Humanism is Eight Letters No More endorsed by Harold John Blackham Levi Fragell Corliss Lamont Harry Stopes Roe and Rob Tielman Islamic political philosophy Al Farabi Avicenna Averroes Fordham edu Retrieved 13 November 2011 Holyoake G J 1896 The Origin and Nature of Secularism London Watts amp Co p 50 Secularism 101 Defining Secularism Origins with George Jacob Holyoake Atheism about com 2 September 2011 Archived from the original on 22 September 2006 Retrieved 13 November 2011 Harp Gillis J 1 November 2010 Positivist Republic Penn State Press ISBN 978 0271039909 Retrieved 12 June 2015 A Positivist Festival The New York Times 16 January 1881 Harp Gillis J 1991 The Church of Humanity New York s Worshipping Positivists Church History 60 4 508 523 doi 10 2307 3169031 JSTOR 3169031 S2CID 162304255 1 Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine City of London page on Finsbury Circus Conservation Area Character Summary The Sexual Contract by Carole Patema p 160 Women s Politics in Britain 1780 1870 Claiming Citizenship by Jane Rendall esp 72 The religious backgrounds of feminist activists Ethical Society history page Ethicalsoc org uk Archived from the original on 18 January 2000 Retrieved 29 September 2013 Howard B Radest 1969 Toward Common Ground The Story of the Ethical Societies in the United States New York Fredrick Unger Publishing Co a b c Colin Campbell 1971 Towards a Sociology of Irreligion London MacMillan Press Walter Nicolas 1997 Humanism what s in the word London RPA BHA Secular Society Ltd p 43 Text of Humanist Manifesto I Americanhumanist org Archived from the original on 7 November 2011 Retrieved 13 November 2011 British Humanist Association History Humanism org uk Archived from the original on 24 November 2012 Retrieved 13 November 2011 Amsterdam Declaration 2002 International Humanist and Ethical Union Archived from the original on 9 May 2008 Retrieved 5 July 2008 IHEU s Bylaws International Humanist and Ethical Union Retrieved 5 July 2008 The Affirmations of Humanism A Statement of Principles secularhumanism org The Council for Secular Humanism Archived from the original on 9 June 2012 Retrieved 28 May 2012 the Council for Secular Humanism 1980 A Secular Humanist Declaration the Council for Secular Humanism Archived from the original on 17 August 2008 Retrieved 27 November 2008 Humanism and Its Aspirations Humanist Manifesto III a successor to the Humanist Manifesto of 1933 Americanhumanist org Archived from the original on 9 August 2007 Retrieved 13 November 2011 Wilson Edwin H 1995 The Genesis of a Humanist Manifesto Amherst NY Humanist Press This book quotes the constitution of the Humanistic Religious Association of London founded in 1853 as saying In forming ourselves into a progressive religious body we have adopted the name Humanistic Religious Association to convey the idea that Religion is a principle inherent in man and is a means of developing his being towards greater perfection We have emancipated ourselves from the ancient compulsory dogmas myths and ceremonies borrowed of old from Asia and still pervading the ruling churches of our age Kurtz Paul 1995 Living Without Religion Eupraxophy Amherst NY Prometheus Books p 8 Eugenie C Scott National Centre for Science and Education Science and Religion Methodology and Humanism science must be limited to using just natural forces in its explanations This is sometimes referred to as the principle of methodological materialism in science Scientists use only methodological materialism because it is logical but primarily because it works We don t need to use supernatural forces to explain nature and we get farther in our understanding of nature by relying on natural causes a b A Secular Humanist Declaration Secularhumanism org 29 July 2005 Archived from the original on 17 August 2008 Retrieved 13 November 2011 Norman Richard 2004 On Humanism New York Routledge ISBN 9780415305228 Theodore Schick Jr 29 July 2005 Morality Requires God or Does It Secularhumanism org Retrieved 12 December 2020 Copson Andrew Roberts Alice 2020 The Little Book of Humanism Piaktus pp 94 95 Every time we have to make a difficult moral choice there will be something new and different about it So applying the same rule every time is not going to work It doesn t mean our values have changed It s more that the situations in which we apply them are different and so we make different choices in practice This requires careful thought Sometimes we might find we ve settled into ways of thinking that mean we re applying rules even if those are own rules We need to challenge ourselves not just acting on what seems like instinct or intuition but going back to thinking carefully about consequences and virtues again Yam Kimberly 9 August 2018 Kristen Bell Drops Some Ethical Gems She Learned On The Good Place Retrieved 1 February 2021 Baggini Julian 2003 Atheism A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press pp 3 4 ISBN 0 19 280424 3 The atheist s rejection of belief in God is usually accompanied by a broader rejection of any supernatural or transcendental reality For example an atheist does not usually believe in the existence of immortal souls life after death ghosts or supernatural powers Although strictly speaking an atheist could believe in any of these things and still remain an atheist the arguments and ideas that sustain atheism tend naturally to rule out other beliefs in the supernatural or transcendental Winston Robert ed 2004 Human New York DK Publishing Inc p 299 ISBN 0 7566 1901 7 Neither atheism nor agnosticism is a full belief system because they have no fundamental philosophy or lifestyle requirements These forms of thought are simply the absence of belief in or denial of the existence of deities Paul Kurtz Vern L Bullough Tim Madigan 19 October 2009 Toward a New Enlightenment the Philosophy of Paul Kurtz Transaction Books ISBN 978 1 56000 118 8 In the past the Communist Party of the Soviet Union waged unremitting warfare against religion It persecuted religious believers confiscated church properties executed or exiled tens of thousands of clerics and prohibited believers to engage in religious instruction or publish religious materials It has also carried on militant pro atheist propaganda campaigns as part of the official ideology of the state in an effort to establish a new Soviet man committed to the ideals of Communist society Mikhail Gorbachev is dismantling such policies by permitting greater freedom of religious conscience If his reforms proceed unabated they could have dramatic implications for the entire Communist world for the Russians may be moving from militant atheism to tolerant humanism Paul Kurtz Vern L Bullough Tim Madigan 19 October 2009 Toward a New Enlightenment the Philosophy of Paul Kurtz Transaction Books ISBN 978 1 56000 118 8 Ranged against the true believer are the militant atheists who adamantly reject the faith as false stupid and reactionary They consider all religious believers to be gullible fools and claim that they are given to accepting gross exaggerations and untenable premises Historic religious claims they think are totally implausible unbelievable disreputable and controvertible for they go beyond the bounds of reason Militant atheists can find no value at all to any religious beliefs or institutions They resist any effort to engage in inquiry or debate Madalyn Murray O Hair is as arrogant in her rejection of religion as is the true believer in his or her profession of faith This form of atheism thus becomes mere dogma The New Atheism and Secular Humanism Center for Inquiry 19 October 2009 Paul Kurtz considered by many the father of the secular humanist movement is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the State University of New York at Buffalo a b Paul Kurtz Vern L Bullough Tim Madigan 19 October 2009 Toward a New Enlightenment the Philosophy of Paul Kurtz Transaction Books ISBN 978 1 56000 118 8 There have been fundamental and irreconcilable differences between humanists and atheists particularly Marxist Leninists The defining characteristic of humanism is its commitment to human freedom and democracy the kind of atheism practiced in the Soviet Union has consistently violated basic human rights Humanists believe first and foremost in the freedom of conscience the free mind and the right of dissent The defense of religious liberty is as precious to the humanist as are the rights of the believers Esptein Greg M 2010 Good Without God What a Billion Nonreligious People Do Believe New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 06 167011 4 The Science of Morality Center for Inquiry 7 September 2010 Retrieved 12 June 2015 American humanist association Publications Chapter eight The Development of Organization Americanhumanist org Archived from the original on 4 June 2011 Retrieved 13 November 2011 India humanist India humanists net 25 June 1997 Archived from the original on 4 February 2012 Retrieved 13 November 2011 Census 2011 Ethnicity and religion in England and Wales Statistics gov uk 27 March 2011 Retrieved 13 November 2011 RELIGION IN AUSTRALIA Australian Bureau of Statistics 26 September 2017 Archived from the original on 20 September 2017 Retrieved 16 October 2017 Top Twenty Religions in the United States 2001 self identification ARIS Adherents com Archived from the original on 8 May 1999 Retrieved 13 November 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Statistics Canada Population by religion by province and territory 2001 Census 0 statcan ca 25 January 2005 Archived from the original on 9 February 2006 Retrieved 13 November 2011 Scotland s Census Ethnicity Identity Language and Religion scotlandscensus gov uk 2017 Retrieved 26 May 2017 Human Etisk Forbund Archived from the original on 23 March 2016 Retrieved 12 June 2015 Norway Members of philosophical2 communities outside the Church of Norway 1990 2013 International Humanist and Ethical Union Our members Retrieved 12 June 2015 International Humanist and Ethical Union IHEU and EHF agree revised protocol 24 February 2009 Iheu org Retrieved 13 November 2011 Randall Balmer Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism 2002 p 516 Christopher P Toumey Evolution and secular humanism Journal of the American Academy of Religion Summer 1993 Vol 61 Issue 2 pp 275 301 IslamWay Radio English islamway com Retrieved 13 November 2011 Jones Dwight 2009 Essays in the Philosophy of Humanism Vol 17 Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 7 July 2015 R Joseph Hoffmann Humanism What it isn t posted 7 July 2012 on Humanism blog Archived from the original on 26 September 2018 Retrieved 6 July 2015 A humanist discussion of Religious Festivals and Ceremonies PDF Andrew Copson 25 December 2017 I m a humanist who loves Christmas for me it s much more than a religious event The Independent Retrieved 4 November 2020 Fellowship of Humanity v County of Alameda 153 Cal App 2d 673 315 P 2d 394 1957 a b Ben Kalka v Kathleen Hawk et al US D C Appeals No 98 5485 2000 Point of Inquiry podcast 17 44 3 February 2006 Ivers Greg 1992 Redefining the First Freedom The Supreme Court and the Consolidation of State Power 1980 1990 Transaction Books pp 47 48 ISBN 978 1560000549 Further reading edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Secular humanism Bullock Alan The Humanist Tradition in the West 1985 by a leading historian Coleman T J III interviewer Tom Flynn interviewee 2014 January Tom Flynn on Secular Humanism The Religious Studies Project Podcast Series Friess Horace L Felix Adler and Ethical Culture 1981 Pfeffer Leo The Religion of Secular Humanism Journal of Church and State Summer 1987 Vol 29 Issue 3 pp 495 507 Radest Howard B The Devil and Secular Humanism The Children of the Enlightenment 1990 a favorable account Toumey Christopher P Evolution and secular humanism Journal of the American Academy of Religion Summer 1993 Vol 61 Issue 2 pp 275 301 focused on fundamentalist attacks Pinker Steven Enlightenment Now The Case for Reason Science Humanism and Progress 2018 Penguin Books Primary sources edit Adler Felix An Ethical Philosophy of Life 1918 Ericson Edward L The Humanist Way An introduction to ethical humanist religion 1988 ISBN 978 0804421768 Frankel Charles The Case for Modern Man 1956 ISBN 978 1199637154 Hook Sidney Out of Step An Unquiet Life in the 20th century 1987 ISBN 978 0060156329 Huxley Julian Essay of a Humanist 1964 Russell Bertrand Why I Am Not a Christian 1957 Portals nbsp Religion nbsp Philosophy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Secular humanism amp oldid 1221200071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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