humanism
Noun
1 the doctrine that people's duty is to promote
human welfare [syn:
humanitarianism]
2 the doctrine emphasizing a person's capacity
for self-realization through reason; rejects religion and the
supernatural [syn:
secular
humanism]
3 the cultural movement of the Renaissance; based
on classical studies
English
Noun
humanism
Translations
ethical system
- Croatian: humanizam
- Czech: humanizmus
- German: Humanismus
Humanism is a broad category of
ethical philosophies that affirm
the dignity and worth of all people, based on the ability to
determine right and wrong by appeal to universal human qualities
— particularly
rationality. It is a
component of a variety of more specific
philosophical systems and is
incorporated into several religious schools of thought. Humanism
entails a commitment to the search for truth and morality through
human means in support of human interests. In focusing on the
capacity for self-determination, humanism rejects the validity of
transcendental justifications, such as a dependence on
belief without reason, the
supernatural, or
texts of allegedly divine origin. Humanists endorse
universal
morality based on the commonality of the
human
condition, suggesting that solutions to human social and
cultural problems cannot be
parochial.
Aspects
Religion
Humanism clearly rejects deference to supernatural
beliefs in resolving human affairs but not necessarily the beliefs
themselves; indeed some strains of Humanism are compatible with
some religions. It is generally compatible with
atheism and
agnosticism but doesn't
require either of these. The word "ignostic" (American) or
"indifferentist" (British, including OED) are sometimes applied to
Humanism, on the grounds that Humanism is an ethical process, not a
dogma about the existence or otherwise of gods; Humanists simply
have no need to be concerned with such questions. Agnosticism or
atheism on their own do not necessarily entail Humanism; many
different and sometimes incompatible philosophies happen to be
atheistic in nature. There is no one
ideology or set of behaviors to
which all atheists adhere, and not all are humanistic. As Humanism
encompasses intellectual currents running through a wide variety of
philosophical and religious thought, several strains of Humanism
allow it to fulfill, supplement or supplant the role of religions,
and in particular, to be embraced as a complete
life stance.
For more on this, see
Humanism
(life stance). In a number of countries, for the purpose of
laws that give rights to "religions", the secular life stance has
become legally recognized as equivalent to a "religion" for this
purpose. In the United States, the Supreme Court recognized that
Humanism is equivalent to a religion in the limited sense of
authorizing Humanists to conduct ceremonies commonly carried out by
officers of religious bodies. The relevant passage is in a footnote
to
Torcaso
v. Watkins (1961). It is often alleged by fundamentalist
critics of Humanism that the Supreme Court "declared Humanism to be
a religion," however the Court's statement, a mere footnote at
most, clearly does not in fact do so; it simply asserts an
equivalency of Humanists' right to act in ways usual to a religion,
such as ceremonial recognition of life's landmarks.
Renaissance
humanism, and its emphasis on returning to the sources,
contributed to the Protestant reformation by helping to gain what
Protestants believe was a more accurate translation of Biblical
texts.
Knowledge
According to Humanism, it is up to humans to find
the truth, as opposed to seeking it through
revelation,
mysticism,
tradition, or anything else
that is incompatible with the application of logic to the
observable evidence. In demanding that humans avoid blindly
accepting unsupported beliefs, it supports
scientific
skepticism and the
scientific
method, rejecting
authoritarianism and
extreme
skepticism, and rendering
faith an unacceptable basis for
action. Likewise, Humanism asserts that knowledge of right and
wrong is based on the best understanding of one's individual and
joint interests, rather than stemming from a transcendental truth
or an arbitrarily local source.
Speciesism
Some have interpreted Humanism to be a form of
speciesism, regarding
humans as being more important than other species. The philosopher
Peter
Singer, himself a Humanist, stated that "despite many
individual exceptions, Humanists have, on the whole, been unable to
free themselves from one of the most central... Christian dogmas:
the prejudice of speciesism". He called on Humanists to "take a
stand against... ruthless exploitation of other sentient beings",
and took issue with statements in the
Humanist
Manifesto II, which he felt gave "precedence to the interests
of members of our own species."
Greek humanism
Sixth
century BCE pantheists
Thales of
Miletus and
Xenophanes
of Colophon prepared the way for later Greek humanist thought.
Thales is credited with creating the maxim "Know thyself", and
Xenophanes refused to recognize the gods of his time and reserved
the divine for the principle of unity in the universe. Later
Anaxagoras,
often described as the "first
freethinker", contributed to
the development of science as a method of understanding the
universe. These Ionian Greeks were the first thinkers to recognize
that nature is available to be studied separately from any alleged
supernatural realm.
Pericles, a pupil
of Anaxagoras, influenced the development of democracy, freedom of
thought, and the exposure of superstitions. Although little of
their work survives,
Protagoras and
Democritus both
espoused agnosticism and a spiritual morality not based on the
supernatural. The historian
Thucydides is
noted for his scientific and rational approach to history.
Islamic humanism
Many
medieval
Muslim thinkers pursued
humanistic,
rational and
scientific
discourses
in their search for
knowledge, meaning and
values. A wide range of
Islamic writings on love
poetry,
history and
philosophical
theology show that medieval Islamic thought was open to the
humanistic ideas of
individualism, occasional
secularism,
skepticism and
liberalism. Certain aspects
of
Renaissance
humanism has its roots in the
medieval
Islamic world, including the "art of
dictation,
called in
Latin,
ars
dictaminis," and "the humanist attitude toward
classical
language."
Renaissance humanism
Renaissance humanism was a movement that affected
the cultural, political, social, and literary landscape of
Europe. Beginning in
Florence in the last decades of the 14th century, Renaissance
humanism revived the study of Latin and Greek, with the resultant
revival of the study of science, philosophy, art and poetry of
classical antiquity.(see Burckhard The Civilisation of the
Renaissance in Italy) The revival was based on interpretations of
Roman and Greek texts, whose emphasis upon art and the senses
marked a great change from the contemplation on the Biblical values
of humility, introspection, and meekness. Beauty was held to
represent a deep inner virtue and value, and an essential element
in the path towards God.
Humanism's divergence from orthodox Christianity
can be identified with the condemnation of
Pelagianism by
Jerome and Augustine. Like the Humanists,
Pelagius perceived
humans as possessing inherent capacity for developing the qualities
that the church perceived as necessitating the gift of grace from
God. Pelagius rejected the doctrine of original sin. The Humanists
likewise recognize humans as born not with a burden of inherited
sin due to their ancestry but with potential for both good and evil
which will develop in this life as their characters are formed. The
Humanists therefore reject
Calvinistic
predestination,
and understandably therefore arouse the hostility of
Protestant
fundamentalists.
Renaissance humanists believed that the
liberal arts
(music, art, grammar, rhetoric, oratory, history, poetry, using
classical texts, and the studies of all of the above) should be
practiced by all levels of wealth. They also approved of self,
human worth and individual dignity.
Noteworthy humanist scholars from this period
include the Dutch theologian
Erasmus,
the English author (and
Roman
Catholic saint)
Thomas
More, the French writer
Francois
Rabelais, the Italian poet
Francesco
Petrarch and the Italian scholar
Giovanni Pico della Mirandola.
Modern era
One of the earliest forerunners of contemporary
chartered humanist organizations was the Humanistic Religious
Association formed in
1853 in London. This
early group was democratically organized, with male and female
members participating in the election of the leadership and
promoted knowledge of the sciences, philosophy, and the arts.
In February
1877, the word
"Humanism" was publicly used, apparently for the first time in
America, to apply to Felix Adler, pejoratively. Adler, however, did
not embrace the term, and instead coined the name "Ethical Culture"
for his new movement — a movement which still exists in the now
Humanist-affiliated
New York Society
for Ethical Culture.
Active in the early
1920s,
F.C.S.
Schiller considered his work to be tied to the Humanist
movement. Schiller himself was influenced by the
pragmatism of
William
James. In
1929 Charles
Francis Potter founded the First Humanist Society of New York
whose advisory board included
Julian
Huxley,
John Dewey,
Albert
Einstein and
Thomas Mann.
Potter was a minister from the
Unitarian
tradition and in
1930 he and his wife,
Clara Cook Potter, published
Humanism:
A New Religion. Throughout the
1930s Potter was a
well-known advocate of women’s rights, access to birth control,
"civil divorce laws", and an end to capital punishment.
Raymond B.
Bragg, the associate editor of The New Humanist, sought to
consolidate the input of L. M. Birkhead, Charles Francis Potter,
and several members of the Western Unitarian Conference. Bragg
asked
Roy Wood
Sellars to draft a document based on this information which
resulted in the publication of the
Humanist
Manifesto in
1933. The Manifesto
and Potter's book became the cornerstones of modern humanism. Both
of these sources envision humanism as a religion.
In 1941 the
American Humanist Association was organized. Noted members of
The AHA included
Isaac
Asimov, who was the president before his death, and writer
Kurt
Vonnegut, who followed as honorary president until his death in
2007.
Robert
Buckman was the head of the association in Canada, and is now
an honorary president.
Modern humanist philosophies
There are many people who
consider themselves humanists, and much variety in the exact type
of humanism to which they subscribe. There is some disagreement
over terminology and definitions, with some people using narrower
or broader interpretations. Not all people who call themselves
humanists hold beliefs that are genuinely humanistic, and not all
people who do hold humanistic beliefs apply the label of humanism
to themselves.
All of this aside, Humanism can be divided into
secular and religious types, although some Humanists, including the
International Humanist and Ethical Union, reject the addition of
any adjective at all to "Humanist," and instead intended the word
to have universal application. Some have argued against the
International Humanist and Ethical Union’s attempts to define
Humanism and its various types.
Secular humanism
Secular
humanism is the branch of humanism that rejects theistic
religious belief and adherence to belief in the existence of a
supernatural world. It is often associated with scientists and
academics, though it is not limited to these groups. Secular
humanists generally believe that following humanist principles
leads to
secularism,
on the basis that supernatural beliefs cannot be supported using
rational arguments and therefore the supernatural aspects of
religiously associated activity should be rejected.
When people speak of Humanism in general, they
are sometimes referring to secular humanism as a default meaning.
Some secular humanists take this even further by denying that less
anti-religious humanists qualify as genuine humanists. Others feel
that the ethical side of humanism transcends the issue of religion,
because being a good person is more important than rejecting
supernatural beliefs. The Humanist Manifestos, which represent
consensus statements of Humanists, present Humanism as an ethical
process and a religion through which we can move above and beyond
both the divisive particulars of older religious stances and the
negation of these.
Some secular humanists prefer the term
Humanist
(capital H, and no adjective), as unanimously endorsed by General
Assembly of the
International Humanist and Ethical Union following universal
endorsement of the
Amsterdam
Declaration 2002.
The secular humanist movement, by that name,
hardly existed prior to 1980. In 1979,
Paul Kurtz
lost his position as editor of The Humanist. Departing the American
Humanist Association, he then launched his own publication,
Free
Inquiry, and founded the Council for Secular Humanism
independently of the American Humanist Association yet pursuing
essentially similar goals.
Religious humanism
Religious
humanism is the branch of humanism that considers itself
religious (based on a functional definition of religion), or
embraces some form of theism, deism, or supernaturalism, without
necessarily being allied with organized religion, frequently
associated with artists, liberal Christians, and scholars in the
liberal arts. It holds appeal for a number of
Unitarian
Universalists, Quakers, Anglicans and Lutherans. Subscribers to
a religion who do not hold supernatural assertions as a necessary
source for their moral values may be religious humanists. The
central position of human beings in humanist philosophy goes with a
humane morality; the
latter alone does not constitute Humanism. A
humanitarian who derives
morality from religious grounds does not make a religious
Humanist.
A number of religious humanists feel that secular
humanism is too coldly logical and rejects the full emotional
experience that makes humans human. From this comes the notion that
secular humanism is inadequate in meeting the human need for a
socially fulfilling philosophy of life. Disagreements over things
of this nature have resulted in friction between secular and
religious humanists, despite their commonalities.
Religious Humanism was studied and developed by
the late Rev. Paul Beattie during his tenure as editor of Religious
Humanism, a periodical which became Unitarian rather than Humanist
after his death and continues as such today.
A Jewish form of religious Humanism was developed
by the late Rabbi Sherwin Wine, who founded the Society for
Humanistic Judaism, now a worldwide movement with 40,000
adherents.
Other forms of humanism
Humanism is also sometimes used to
describe "humanities" scholars, (particularly scholars of the
Greco-Roman classics). As mentioned above, it is sometimes used to
mean humanitarianism. There is also a school of
humanistic
psychology, and an educational method.
Educational humanism
Humanism, as a current in
education, began to dominate
school systems in the 17th century. It held that the studies that
develop human intellect are those that make humans "most truly
human". The practical basis for this was
faculty
psychology, or the belief in distinct intellectual faculties,
such as the analytical, the mathematical, the linguistic, etc.
Strengthening one faculty was believed to benefit other faculties
as well (transfer of training). A key player in the late
19th-century educational humanism was U.S. Commissioner of
Education W.T. Harris, whose "Five Windows of the Soul" (
mathematics,
geography,
history,
grammar, and
literature/
art) were believed especially
appropriate for "development of the faculties". Educational
humanists believe that "the best studies, for the best kids" are
"the best studies" for all kids. While humanism as an educational
current was largely discredited by the innovations of the early
20th century, it still holds out, in some elite preparatory schools
and some high school disciplines (especially, in
literature).
Manifestos and statements setting out Humanist viewpoints
Forms of humanism
- See the humanism philosophy box at top on the right.
Organizations
For more organizations see
:Category:Humanist associations
References
Notes
Bibliography
- Petrosyan, M. 1972 Humanism: Its Philosophical, Ethical, and
Sociological Aspects, Progress Publishers, Moscow.
- Barry, P. 2002 Beginning Theory: an introduction to literary
and cultural theory, 2nd edn, Manchester University Press,
Manchester, U.K., p. 36
- Everything2, 2002 Liberal Humanism, http://everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1321605
- Liberal Humanism (Modernism) and Postmodernism 2001, http://herbergeronline.asu.edu/the220/notes/postmodern.html
- Moon, B. 2001 Literary terms: a practical glossary, 2nd edn,
Chalkface Press, Cotteslow, W.A., Australia, p.62
- PhilWeb: Theoretical Resources Off– and On–line. "Liberal
Humanism."
http://www.phillwebb.net/History/TwentiethCentury/AngloAmerican/LiberalHumanism.htm
External links
Manifestos and statements setting out humanist viewpoints
Introductions to humanism
humanism in Tosk Albanian: Humanismus
humanism in Arabic: إنسانية
humanism in Aragonese: Umanismo
humanism in Bengali: মানবতাবাদ
humanism in Bulgarian: Хуманизъм
humanism in Catalan: Humanisme
humanism in Czech: Humanismus
humanism in Welsh: Dyneiddiaeth
humanism in Danish: Humanisme
humanism in German: Humanismus
humanism in Estonian: Humanism
humanism in Spanish: Humanismo
humanism in Esperanto: Humanismo
humanism in Basque: Pentsamendu humanista
humanism in Persian: اومانیسم
humanism in French: Humanisme
humanism in Friulian: Umanisim
humanism in Galician: Humanismo
humanism in Indonesian: Humanisme
humanism in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Humanismo
humanism in Italian: Umanesimo
humanism in Hebrew: הומניזם
humanism in Javanese: Humanisme
humanism in Latin: Humanismus
humanism in Latvian: Humānisms
humanism in Lithuanian: Humanizmas
humanism in Hungarian: Humanizmus
humanism in Macedonian: Хуманизам
humanism in Dutch: Humanisme
humanism in Japanese: ヒューマニズム
humanism in Norwegian: Humanisme
humanism in Occitan (post 1500): Umanisme
humanism in Uzbek: Gumanizm
humanism in Polish: Humanizm
humanism in Portuguese: Humanismo
humanism in Romanian: Umanism
humanism in Russian: Гуманизм
humanism in Scots: Humanism
humanism in Albanian: Humanizmi
humanism in Simple English: Humanism
humanism in Slovak: Humanizmus
(ľudomilnosť)
humanism in Slovenian: Humanizem
humanism in Serbian: Хуманизам
humanism in Finnish: Humanismi
humanism in Swedish: Humanism
humanism in Thai: ลัทธิมนุษยนิยม
humanism in Vietnamese: Chủ nghĩa nhân đạo
humanism in Turkish: Hümanizm
humanism in Ukrainian: Гуманізм
humanism in Chinese: 人文主义
Christian humanism, Religious Humanism,
anthroposophy,
bibliolatry,
bibliomania,
bluestockingism, book
learning, book madness,
bookiness,
bookishness,
booklore, classical
scholarship,
classicism,
culture,
donnishness,
eruditeness,
erudition, free thought,
freethinking,
humanistic scholarship, integral humanism,
intellectualism,
intellectuality,
latitudinarianism,
learnedness,
letters,
literacy, naturalistic
humanism, new humanism,
pedantism,
pedantry,
reading,
scholarship, secular
humanism