Difference between revisions of "Humanism" - New World Encyclopedia

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: ''For the Renaissance liberal arts movement, see [[Renaissance humanism]]''
 
  
{{Humanism}}
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[[Image:Vitruvian.jpg|thumb|300px|The ''Vitruvian Man'', [[Leonardo da Vinci]]'s study of the ideal proportions of the [[human body]]]]
'''Humanism'''is a broad category of [[ethics|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 [[rationalism]]. Humanism is a component of a variety of more specific [[philosophy|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 [[faith]], the supernatural, or divinely revealed texts. Humanists endorse [[Morality |universal morality]] based on the commonality of [[human nature]], suggesting that solutions to human social and cultural problems cannot be [[Parochialism|parochial]].<ref>
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'''Humanism''' is an attitude of thought which gives primary importance to [[human being]]s. Its outstanding historical example was [[Renaissance]] humanism from the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries, which developed from the rediscovery by [[Europe]]an scholars of classical [[Latin (language)|Latin]] and [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] texts. As a reaction against the religious authoritarianism of Medieval [[Catholicism]], it emphasized human dignity, [[beauty]], and potential, and affected every aspect of [[culture]] in Europe, including [[philosophy]], [[music]], and the arts. This humanist emphasis on the value and importance of the individual influenced the [[Protestant Reformation]], and brought about social and [[politics|political]] change in Europe.
{{Cite web
 
|title = Definitions of humanism (subsection)
 
|publisher = Institute for Humanist Studies
 
|url = http://humaniststudies.org/humphil.html
 
|accessmonthday = [[16 Jan]]
 
|accessyear = [[2007]]}}</ref>
 
  
Humanism is characterized by confidence in human reason and the scientific method as a means of discovering truth and organizing society;  an emphasis on earthly life; and optimism that life can be made better for all humans.  
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There was another round of revival of humanism in the [[Age of Enlightenment]] in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as a reaction against the newly prevalent dogmatic authoritarianism of [[Lutheranism]], [[Calvinism]], [[Anglicanism]], and the [[Counter-Reformation]] from around the end of the sixteenth century to the seventeenth century. During the last two centuries, various elements of Enlightenment humanism have been manifested in philosophical trends such as [[existentialism]], [[utilitarianism]], [[pragmatism]], and [[Marxism]]. Generally speaking, Enlightenment humanism was more advanced than Renaissance humanism in its secular orientation, and produced [[atheism]], Marxism, as well as [[Secular Humanism|secular humanism]]. Secular humanism, which denies God and attributes the universe entirely to material forces, today has replaced religion for many people.
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Humanism is an inevitable reaction to [[theism]] when it is authoritarian and dogmatic. For a complete understanding of the nature and purpose of human life, humanism and theism are complementary.  
  
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==Humanism in Renaissance and Enlightenment==
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===Renaissance humanism===
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[[Renaissance]] humanism was a [[Europe]]an intellectual and [[culture|cultural]] movement which began in Florence, [[Italy]], in the last decades of the fourteenth century, rose to prominence in the fifteenth century, and spread throughout the rest of Europe in the sixteenth century. The term "humanism" itself was coined much later, in 1808, by German educator F.J. Niethammer to describe a program of study distinct from science and engineering; but in the fifteenth century, the term ''"umanista,"'' or ''"humanist,"'' was current, meaning a student of human affairs or human nature. The movement developed from the rediscovery by European scholars of many [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] and Roman texts. Its focus was on human dignity and potential and the place of mankind in nature; it valued [[reason]] and the evidence of the senses in understanding [[truth]]. The humanist emphasis upon [[art]] and the senses marked a great change from the contemplation on the [[Bible|biblical]] values of humility, introspection, and meekness that had dominated European thought in the previous centuries. [[Beauty]] was held to represent a deep inner virtue and value, and an essential element in the path towards God.
  
== History ==
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Renaissance humanism was a reaction to Catholic [[scholasticism]] which had dominated the universities of Italy, and later [[Oxford University|Oxford]] and [[University of Paris|Paris]], and whose methodology was derived from [[Thomas Aquinas]]. Renaissance humanists followed a cycle of studies, the ''studia humanitatis'' (studies of humanity), consisting of [[grammar]], [[rhetoric]], [[poetry]], [[history]], and [[morality|moral]] [[philosophy]], based on classical Roman and Greek texts. Many humanists held positions as teachers of literature and grammar or as government bureaucrats. Humanism affected every aspect of culture in Europe, including [[music]] and the arts. It profoundly influenced philosophy by emphasizing rhetoric and a more literary presentation and by introducing Latin translations of Greek classical texts which revived many of the concepts of ancient Greek philosophy.
===Ancient Greece===
 
{{main|Greek philosophy}}
 
  
Sixth century B.C.E. 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 recognized the divine as 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. [[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.<ref>{{Cite book
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The humanist emphasis on the value and importance of the individual was not necessarily a total rejection of religion. According to historians such as Nicholas Terpstra, the Renaissance was very much characterized with activities of lay religious co-fraternities with a more internalized kind of religiosity, and it influenced the [[Protestant Reformation]], which rejected the hierarchy of the [[Roman Catholicism|Roman Catholic Church]] and declared that every individual could stand directly before [[God]].<ref>Nicholas Terpstra, ''Lay Confraternities and Civic Religion in Renaissance Bologna'' (Cambridge University Press, 2002, ISBN 978-0521522618).</ref> Humanist values also brought about social and political change by acknowledging the value and dignity of every individual regardless of social and economic status. Renaissance humanism also inspired the study of biblical sources and newer, more accurate translations of biblical texts.
|last = Potter
 
|first = Charles
 
|authorlink = Charles Francis Potter
 
|title = Humanism A new Religion
 
| pages = 64&ndash;69
 
|publisher = Simon and Schuster
 
|date = 1930}}
 
</ref>
 
  
The humanist tradition of philosophy can be said to originate in the fifth century B.C.E., when the [[sophism|Sophists]] and [[Socrates]] introduced social, political and moral questions into their philosophical discussions.  Various schools of thought which used human experience as the ground for theories of knowledge, value and [[ethics]] began to develop a concept of human identity in the context of a greater reality.  The [[Skepticism|Skeptics]] questioned whether humans could acquire actual knowledge of the universe and substituted “plausible knowledge” which could be acquired and verified through experience.  [[Epicureanism|Epicureans]]  established a moral system based on the principle that human beings seek pleasure and avoid pain.  [[Stoicism|Stoics]] attempted to overcome human suffering and transcience by defining man’s place in the cosmic order.
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Humanist scholars from this period include the Dutch theologian [[Desiderius Erasmus|Erasmus]], the English author [[Thomas More]], the French writer [[Francois Rabelais]], the Italian poet [[Francesco Petrarch]], and the Italian scholar [[Giovanni Pico della Mirandola]].
 
 
=== Renaissance Humanism===
 
'''Renaissance humanism''' (often designated simply as ''humanism'') was a [[Europe]]an intellectual and cultural movement which began  in Florence, [[Italy]] in the last decades of the fourteenth century, rose to prominence in the fifteenth century, and spread throught the rest of Europe in the sixteenth century. The movement developed from the rediscovery by European scholars of many [[Latin (language)|Latin]] and [[Ancient Greek|Greek]] texts. Its focus was on human dignity and potential and the place of mankind in nature; it valued reason and the evidence of the senses in reaching the truth. The humanist emphasis upon art and the senses marked a great change from the contemplation on the [[Christianity|Biblical values]] of humility, introspection, and meekness that had dominated European thought in the previous centuries. Beauty was held to represent a deep inner virtue and value, and an essential element in the path towards God.
 
  
[[Renaissance]] humanism was a reaction to the Christian [[scholasticism]] which had dominated the universities of Italy, and later [[Oxford University|Oxford]] and [[University of Paris|Paris]], and whose methodology was derived from [[Thomas Aquinas]]. Renaissance humanists followed a cycle of studies, the ''studia humanitatis'' (studies of humanity), consisting of grammar, rhetoric, [[poetry]], [[history]] and [[moral philosophy]], based on classical Roman and Greek texts. Many humanists held positions as teachers of literature and grammar, or as government bureaucrats.  Humanism affected every aspect of culture in [[Europe]], including music and the arts. It profoundly influenced philosophy by emphasizing rhetoric and a more literary presentation and by introducing Latin translations of Greek classical texts which revived many of the concepts of ancient Greek philosophy.
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===Enlightenment humanism===
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The term, "Enlightenment humanism," is not as well known as "Renaissance humanism." The reason is that the relationship of humanism to the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] has not been as much clarified by [[history|historians]] than that between humanism and the Renaissance. But, there actually existed humanism in the Enlightenment as well, and quite a few historians have related humanism to the Enlightenment.<ref>Aram Vartanian, ''Science and Humanism in the French Enlightenment'' (Charlottesville, VA: Rookwood Press, 1999, ISBN 978-1886365117).</ref> Enlightenment humanism is characterized by such key words as [[autonomy]], [[reason]], and progress, and it is usually distinguished from Renaissance humanism because of its more secular nature. While Renaissance humanism was still somewhat religious, developing an internalized type of religiosity, which influenced the Protestant Reformation, Enlightenment humanism marked a radical departure from religion.  
  
The humanist emphasis on the value and importance of the individual influenced the [[Protestant Reformation]], which rejected the hierarchy of the [[Roman Catholicism|Roman Catholic Church]] and declared that every individual could stand directly before God. Humanist values also brought about social and political change by acknowledging the value and dignity of every individual regardless of social and economic status. Renaissance humanism also inspired the study of Biblical sources and newer, more accurate translations of Biblical texts.
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The Enlightenment was a reaction against the religious dogmatism of the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The religious dogmatism of that time in Europe had been developed in three domains: 1) Protestant scholasticism by [[Lutheranism|Lutheran]] and [[Calvinism|Calvinist]] divines, 2) "Jesuit scholasticism" (sometimes called the "second scholasticism") by the [[Counter-Reformation]], and 3) the theory of the divine right of kings in the [[Church of England]]. It had fueled the bloody [[Thirty Years' War]] (1618-1648) and the English Civil War (1642-1651). The Enlightenment rejected this religious dogmatism. The intellectual leaders of the Enlightenment regarded themselves as a courageous elite who would lead the world into progress from a long period of doubtful tradition and ecclesiastical tyranny. They reduced religion to those essentials which could only be "rationally" defended, i.e., certain basic moral principles and a few universally held beliefs about God. Taken to one logical extreme, the Enlightenment even resulted in [[atheism]]. Aside from these universal principles and beliefs, religions in their particularity were largely banished from the public square.
  
Humanist scholars from this period include the Dutch theologist [[Desiderius Erasmus|Erasmus]], the English author [[Thomas More]], the French writer [[Francois Rabelais]], the Italian poet [[Francesco Petrarch]] and the Italian scholar [[Giovanni Pico della Mirandola]].
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==Humanism after the Enlightenment==
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After the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]], its humanism continued and was developed in the next two centuries. Humanism has come to encompass a series of interrelated concepts about the nature, definition, capabilities, and values of human persons. In it refers to perspectives in [[philosophy]], [[anthropology]], [[history]], [[epistemology]], [[aesthetics]], [[ontology]], [[ethics]], and [[politics]], which are based on the [[human being]] as a point of reference. Humanism refers to any perspective which is committed to the centrality and interests of human beings. It also refers to a belief that [[reason]] and [[autonomy]] are the basic aspects of human existence, and that the foundation for ethics and society is autonomy and [[morality|moral]] equality. During the last two centuries, various elements of humanism have been manifested in philosophical views including [[existentialism]], [[utilitarianism]], [[pragmatism]], [[personalism]], and [[Marxism]].
  
==Humanism in Philosophy==
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Also in the area of [[education]], the late nineteenth century educational humanist William T. Harris, who was U.S. Commissioner of Education and founder of the ''Journal of Speculative Philosophy,'' followed the Enlightenment theory of education that the studies that develop human intellect are those that make humans "most truly human." His "Five Windows of the Soul" ([[mathematics]], [[geography]], history, [[grammar]], and [[literature]]/[[art]]) were believed especially appropriate for the development of the distinct intellectual faculties such as the analytical, the mathematical, and the linguistic. Harris, an egalitarian who worked to bring education to all children regardless of [[gender]] or [[economics|economic]] status, believed that education in these subjects provided a "civilizing insight" that was necessary in order for [[democracy]] to flourish.
The term “humanism” was coined by the nineteenth-century German educator F. J. Niethammer to refer to an education based on Greek and Latin classics.  The term has come to encompass a series of interrelated concepts about the nature, definition, capabilities, values, and education of human persons. In philosophy it refers to theories of [[anthropology]], [[history]], [[epistemology]], [[aesthetics]], [[ontology]], [[ethics]], and [[politics]] which are based on the human being as a point of reference.
 
  
Humanism refers to any system which is committed to the centrality and interests of human beings. It also refers to a belief that reason and [[autonomy]] are the basic aspects of human existence, and that the foundation for ethics and society is autonomy and moral equality.  Humanism also describes the belief that everything can be understood , and all social and political problems solved, through reason and the scientific method.
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== Modern humanist movements ==
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One of the earliest forerunners of contemporary chartered humanist organizations was the Humanistic Religious Association formed in 1853 in [[London]]. This early group was [[democracy|democratically]] organized, with male and female members participating in the election of the leadership and promoted [[knowledge]] of the [[science]]s, [[philosophy]], and the arts.
  
During the last two centuries, various elements of humanism have been manifested in philosophical systems such as [[existentialism]], [[utilitarianism]], [[pragmatism]] and [[Marxism]].
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Active in the early 1920s, Ferdinand Canning Scott 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.  
  
=== Modern Humanist Movements ===
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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. It referred to humanism as a religion, but denied all supernaturalism and went so far as to affirm that: "Religious humanists regard the universe as self-existing and not created."<ref>[https://americanhumanist.org/what-is-humanism/manifesto1/ Humanist Manifesto I] ''American Humanist Association''. Retrieved August 19, 2023.</ref> So, it was hardly religious humansim; it was rather [[Secular Humanism|secular humanism]]. The ''Manifesto'' and Potter's book became the cornerstones of modern organizations of secular humanism. They defined religion in secular terms and refused traditional [[Theism|theistic]] perspectives such as the existence of [[God]] and his act of [[Creationism|creation]].  
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.
 
  
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.  
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In 1941, the American Humanist Association was organized. Noted members of The AHA include [[Isaac Asimov]], who was the president before his death, and writer [[Kurt Vonnegut]], who also was president before his death.
  
[[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, both of which envision humanism as a religion, became the cornerstones of modern humanist organizations.
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== Secular and religious humanism ==
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[[Secular Humanism|Secular humanism]] rejects [[theism|theistic]] [[religion|religious]] belief, and the existence of [[God]] or other supernatural being, on the grounds that supernatural beliefs cannot be supported rationally. Secular humanists generally believe that successful ethical, political, and social organization can be accomplished through the use of reason or other faculties of man. Many theorists of modern humanist organizations such as American Humanist Association hold this perspective.  
  
In 1941 the American Humanist Association was organized. Noted members of The AHA include [[Isaac Asimov]], who was the president before his death, and writer [[Kurt Vonnegut]], who is the current honorary president.
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Religious humanism embraces some form of theism, [[deism]], or supernaturalism, without necessarily being allied with organized religion. The existence of God or the divine, and the relationship between God and human beings is seen as an essential aspect of human character, and each individual is endowed with unique value through this relationship. Humanism within organized religion can refer to the appreciation of human qualities as an expression of God, or to a movement to acknowledge common humanity and to serve the needs of the human community. Religious thinkers such as [[Erasmus]], [[Blaise Pascal]], and [[Jacques Maritain]] hold this orientation.
  
=== Secular and Religious Humanism ===
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==Assessment==
[[Secular humanism]] rejects theistic religious belief, and the existence of a supernatural, on the grounds that supernatural beliefs cannot be supported rationally. It is often associated with scientists and academics who are committed to scientific inquiry. Secular humanists generally believe that successful ethical, political and social organization can be accomplished through the use of reason.
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As long as [[human being]]s were created in the image of [[God]], their values and dignity are to be respected. But [[history]] shows that they were very often neglected even in the name of God or in the name of an established [[religion|religious]] institution like church. So, it was natural that [[Renaissance]] humanism occurred in the fourteenth century as a reaction against the religious authoritarianism of Medieval [[Catholicism]]. If the Renaissance was a humanist reaction, there was also a [[faith]]-oriented reaction, which was the [[Protestant Reformation]]. Hence, Medieval Catholicism is said to have been disintegrated into two very different kinds of reactions: Renaissance and Reformation. In the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, there was again religious authoritarianism, which arose from among [[Lutheranism]], [[Calvinism]], [[Anglicanism]], and the [[Counter-Reformation]]. Therefore, [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] humanism naturally emerged as a movement against it, and its more faith-oriented counterpart was [[Pietism]]. Enlightenment humanism was more advanced in its secular orientation than Renaissance humanism, and its tradition even issued in [[atheism]] and [[Marxism]]. Today, so-called [[Secular Humanism|secular humanism]] constitutes a great challenge to established religion.
  
Religious humanism embraces some form of theism, deism, or supernaturalism, without necessarily being allied with organized religion. The existence of God or the divine, and the relationship between God and human beings is seen as an essential aspect of human character, and each individual is endowed with unique value through this relationship. Humanism within organized religion can refer to the appreciation of human qualities as an expression of God, or to a movement to acknowledge common humanity and to serve the needs of the human community.
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Humanism is an inevitable reaction to [[theism]] when it is authoritarian and dogmatic. For a complete understanding of the nature and purpose of human life, humanism and theism are complementary. As the American theologian [[Reinhold Niebuhr]] said, a "new synthesis" of Renaissance and Reformation is called for.<ref>Reinhold Niebuhr, ''The Nature and Destiny of Man: Volume II Human Destiny'' (Prentice Hall, 1980, ISBN 978-0684718590).</ref>
  
=== Humanism in Education===
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==Notes==
Humanism, as a current in [[education]], appeared during the seventeenth 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,” the belief that the mind consists of distinct intellectual faculties, such as the analytical, the mathematical, and the linguistic.  Strengthening one faculty was believed to benefit other faculties. A late nineteenth-century educational humanist was U.S. Commissioner of Education W.T. Harris (1835 -1909, founder of the ''Journal of Speculative Philosophy''), whose "''Five Windows of the Soul''" ([[mathematics]], [[geography]], [[history]], [[grammar]], and [[literature]]/[[art]]) were believed especially appropriate for "development of the faculties." Harris, an egalitarian who worked to bring education to all children regardless of gender or economic status, believed that education in these subjects provided a “civilizing insight” that was necessary in order for democracy to flourish. 
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<references/>
== See also ==
 
* [[List of basic humanism topics]]
 
* [[List of humanists]]
 
* [[:Category:Humanists]]
 
  
 
=== Forms of humanism ===
 
:''See the humanism philosophy box at top on the right.''
 
 
=== Related philosophies ===
 
* [[Deism]]
 
* [[Extropianism]]
 
* [[Infinitism]]
 
* [[Objectivity (philosophy)|Objectivism]]
 
* [[Pragmatism]]
 
* [[rationalist movement|Rationalism]]
 
 
 
=== Other ===
 
* [[Antihumanism]]
 
* [[Humanistic psychology]]
 
* [[Social psychology]]
 
* [[Religious freedom]] — freedom of religion ''and'' belief
 
 
 
== Notes ==
 
<references />
 
 
== References ==
 
== References ==
*Petrosyan, M. ''Humanism: Its Philosophical, Ethical, and Sociological Aspects''. Progress Publishers, 1972.
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*Ehrenfeld, David W. ''The Arrogance of Humanism.'' New York, Oxford University Press, 2003. ISBN 978-0195028904
 
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*Lamont, Corliss. ''The Philosophy of Humanism.'' Humanist Press, 1997. ISBN 978-0931779077
*Lamont, Corliss. ''The philosophy of humanism''. Humanist Press, 1997. ISBN 978-0931779077  
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*Niebuhr, Reinhold. ''The Nature and Destiny of Man: Volume II Human Destiny''. Prentice Hall, 1980. ISBN 978-0684718590
 
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*Petrosyan, M. ''Humanism: Its Philosophical, Ethical, and Sociological Aspects.'' Progress Publishers, 1972. {{ASIN|B0006CBZ24}}
*Ehrenfeld, David W. ''The arrogance of humanism''. New York, Oxford University Press, 2003. ISBN 978-0195028904
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*Said, Edward W. ''Humanism and Democratic Criticism.'' Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. ISBN 978-1403947109
 
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*Terpstra, Nicholas. ''Lay Confraternities and Civic Religion in Renaissance Bologna''. Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0521522618
*Said, Edward W. ''Humanism and democratic criticism''. Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. ISBN 978-1403947109
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*Vartanian, Aram. ''Science and Humanism in the French Enlightenment''. Rookwood Press, 1999. ISBN 978-1886365117
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
=== Manifestos and statements setting out humanist viewpoints===
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All links retrieved August 19, 2023.
* [http://www.americanhumanist.org/about/manifesto1.html Humanist Manifesto I] (1933)
 
* [http://www.americanhumanist.org/about/manifesto2.html Humanist Manifesto II] (1973)
 
* [http://www.secularhumanism.org/index.php?section=main&page=declaration A Secular Humanist Declaration] (1980)
 
* [http://www.iheu.org/amsterdamdeclaration Amsterdam Declaration] (2002)
 
* [http://www.americanhumanist.org/3/HumandItsAspirations.php Humanist Manifesto III] (2003)
 
 
 
=== Introductions to humanism ===
 
* [http://www.jcn.com/humanism.html ''What Is Humanism?''] from the [[American Humanist Association]]
 
* [http://MHEC.humanists.net/HUMNISM.HTM Humanism: Why, What, and What For, In 882 Words]
 
* [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/humanism-civic/ Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Civic Humanism]
 
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07538b.htm Catholic Encyclopedia article on Renaissance Humanism]
 
 
 
===Organizations===
 
*International
 
** [http://www.centerforinquiry.net Center for Inquiry International]
 
** [http://www.rationalistinternational.net Rationalist International]
 
** [http://www.iheu.org International Humanist and Ethical Union]
 
** [http://www.iheyo.org/ International Humanist and Ethical Youth Organisation]
 
*Europe
 
** [http://www.humanism.org.uk British Humanist Association]
 
** [http://www.humanism-scotland.org.uk Humanist Society of Scotland]
 
** [http://www.galha.org UK Gay and Lesbian Humanist Association]
 
** [http://www.humanisteurope.org/ Humanist Movement — Europe]
 
** [http://www.neuer-humanismus.de/ Humanist Movement — German]
 
** [http://www.humanistischverbond.nl/ Humanist Movement — The Netherlands]
 
** [http://nireland.humanists.net/ Humanist Association of N. Ireland]
 
** [http://www.irish-humanists.org/ Humanist Association of Ireland]
 
** [http://www.umanisti.it/ Humanist Movement — Italy]
 
** [http://www.humanist-net.org Humanist n.e.t. — German/ English]
 
** [http://www.human.no/ Norwegian Humanist Association]
 
** [http://www.humanisterna.se/ Swedish Humanist Association]
 
** [http://www.humanism.ro Romanian association Solidarity for Freedom of Conscience — Romanian/ English]
 
** [http://humanismo.zip.net Virtual Sociedade Humanista Mineira]
 
*North America
 
** [http://www.americanhumanist.org/ American Humanist Association]
 
** [http://www.spiritualhumanism.org/ The Church of Spiritual Humanism]
 
** [http://www.huumanists.org/ HUUmanists, Unitarian Universalist publishers of the journal ''Religious Humanism'']
 
** [http://canada.humanists.net Humanist Association of Canada]
 
** [http://www.humanistcenterofcultures.org/wiki/wiki.cgi Chicago humanist wiki pages]
 
** [http://www.humaniststudies.org/ Institute for Humanist Studies]
 
** [http://mb.humanists.ca Humanist Association of Manitoba]
 
** [http://kwcg.humanists.net/CMS/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=144&Itemid=170 Society of Ontario Freethinkers]
 
** [http://www.HFSD.info/ The Humanist Fellowship of San Diego]
 
** [http://www.secularhumanism.org Council for Secular Humanism]
 
** [http://www.freethoughtassociation.org/ Freethought Association of West Michigan]
 
 
 
=== Web articles ===
 
* [http://www.newhumanist.org.uk/ ''New Humanist''] British magazine from the Rationalist Press Association (RPA)
 
* [http://www.TheSystemHasYou.com/ Nanovirus — A humanist perspective on politics, technology and culture]
 
* [http://www.modernhumanist.com/ ''Modern Humanist''] An Online Journal for Modern Humanism, Humanist Philosophy & Life
 
  
=== Web books ===
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* [https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07538b.htm Humanism] ''Catholic Encyclopedia''.
* [http://myweb.dal.ca/kernohan/godless  A Guide for the Godless: The Secular Path to Meaning]
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* [https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/humanism-civic/ Civic Humanism] ''Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy''.
* [http://www.humanisteurope.org/ European Region of the Humanist International]
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* [https://www.rep.routledge.com/articles/thematic/humanism-renaissance/v-1 Humanism, Renaissance] ''Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy''.
* [http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Thinking_And_Moral_Problems Thinking And Moral Problems], [http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Religions_And_Their_Source Religions And Their Source], [http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Purpose Purpose], and [http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Developing_A_Universal_Religion Developing A Universal Religion], four Parts of a Wikibook.
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* [https://www.huumanists.org/ UU Humanist Association]  
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* [https://www.transfigurism.org/ Mormon Transhumanist Association]  
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* [https://secularhumanism.org/ Free Inquiry Magazine] ''Center for Inquiry''
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* [https://americanhumanist.org/ American Humanist Association]
  
 
[[Category:Philosophy and religion]]
 
[[Category:Philosophy and religion]]
  
 
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{{Credit2|Humanism|107704225|Renaissance_humanism|108790417}}

Latest revision as of 19:10, 19 August 2023


The Vitruvian Man, Leonardo da Vinci's study of the ideal proportions of the human body

Humanism is an attitude of thought which gives primary importance to human beings. Its outstanding historical example was Renaissance humanism from the fourteenth to sixteenth centuries, which developed from the rediscovery by European scholars of classical Latin and Greek texts. As a reaction against the religious authoritarianism of Medieval Catholicism, it emphasized human dignity, beauty, and potential, and affected every aspect of culture in Europe, including philosophy, music, and the arts. This humanist emphasis on the value and importance of the individual influenced the Protestant Reformation, and brought about social and political change in Europe.

There was another round of revival of humanism in the Age of Enlightenment in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as a reaction against the newly prevalent dogmatic authoritarianism of Lutheranism, Calvinism, Anglicanism, and the Counter-Reformation from around the end of the sixteenth century to the seventeenth century. During the last two centuries, various elements of Enlightenment humanism have been manifested in philosophical trends such as existentialism, utilitarianism, pragmatism, and Marxism. Generally speaking, Enlightenment humanism was more advanced than Renaissance humanism in its secular orientation, and produced atheism, Marxism, as well as secular humanism. Secular humanism, which denies God and attributes the universe entirely to material forces, today has replaced religion for many people.

Humanism is an inevitable reaction to theism when it is authoritarian and dogmatic. For a complete understanding of the nature and purpose of human life, humanism and theism are complementary.

Humanism in Renaissance and Enlightenment

Renaissance humanism

Renaissance humanism was a European intellectual and cultural movement which began in Florence, Italy, in the last decades of the fourteenth century, rose to prominence in the fifteenth century, and spread throughout the rest of Europe in the sixteenth century. The term "humanism" itself was coined much later, in 1808, by German educator F.J. Niethammer to describe a program of study distinct from science and engineering; but in the fifteenth century, the term "umanista," or "humanist," was current, meaning a student of human affairs or human nature. The movement developed from the rediscovery by European scholars of many Greek and Roman texts. Its focus was on human dignity and potential and the place of mankind in nature; it valued reason and the evidence of the senses in understanding truth. The humanist emphasis upon art and the senses marked a great change from the contemplation on the biblical values of humility, introspection, and meekness that had dominated European thought in the previous centuries. Beauty was held to represent a deep inner virtue and value, and an essential element in the path towards God.

Renaissance humanism was a reaction to Catholic scholasticism which had dominated the universities of Italy, and later Oxford and Paris, and whose methodology was derived from Thomas Aquinas. Renaissance humanists followed a cycle of studies, the studia humanitatis (studies of humanity), consisting of grammar, rhetoric, poetry, history, and moral philosophy, based on classical Roman and Greek texts. Many humanists held positions as teachers of literature and grammar or as government bureaucrats. Humanism affected every aspect of culture in Europe, including music and the arts. It profoundly influenced philosophy by emphasizing rhetoric and a more literary presentation and by introducing Latin translations of Greek classical texts which revived many of the concepts of ancient Greek philosophy.

The humanist emphasis on the value and importance of the individual was not necessarily a total rejection of religion. According to historians such as Nicholas Terpstra, the Renaissance was very much characterized with activities of lay religious co-fraternities with a more internalized kind of religiosity, and it influenced the Protestant Reformation, which rejected the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church and declared that every individual could stand directly before God.[1] Humanist values also brought about social and political change by acknowledging the value and dignity of every individual regardless of social and economic status. Renaissance humanism also inspired the study of biblical sources and newer, more accurate translations of biblical texts.

Humanist scholars from this period include the Dutch theologian Erasmus, the English author Thomas More, the French writer Francois Rabelais, the Italian poet Francesco Petrarch, and the Italian scholar Giovanni Pico della Mirandola.

Enlightenment humanism

The term, "Enlightenment humanism," is not as well known as "Renaissance humanism." The reason is that the relationship of humanism to the Enlightenment has not been as much clarified by historians than that between humanism and the Renaissance. But, there actually existed humanism in the Enlightenment as well, and quite a few historians have related humanism to the Enlightenment.[2] Enlightenment humanism is characterized by such key words as autonomy, reason, and progress, and it is usually distinguished from Renaissance humanism because of its more secular nature. While Renaissance humanism was still somewhat religious, developing an internalized type of religiosity, which influenced the Protestant Reformation, Enlightenment humanism marked a radical departure from religion.

The Enlightenment was a reaction against the religious dogmatism of the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The religious dogmatism of that time in Europe had been developed in three domains: 1) Protestant scholasticism by Lutheran and Calvinist divines, 2) "Jesuit scholasticism" (sometimes called the "second scholasticism") by the Counter-Reformation, and 3) the theory of the divine right of kings in the Church of England. It had fueled the bloody Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) and the English Civil War (1642-1651). The Enlightenment rejected this religious dogmatism. The intellectual leaders of the Enlightenment regarded themselves as a courageous elite who would lead the world into progress from a long period of doubtful tradition and ecclesiastical tyranny. They reduced religion to those essentials which could only be "rationally" defended, i.e., certain basic moral principles and a few universally held beliefs about God. Taken to one logical extreme, the Enlightenment even resulted in atheism. Aside from these universal principles and beliefs, religions in their particularity were largely banished from the public square.

Humanism after the Enlightenment

After the Enlightenment, its humanism continued and was developed in the next two centuries. Humanism has come to encompass a series of interrelated concepts about the nature, definition, capabilities, and values of human persons. In it refers to perspectives in philosophy, anthropology, history, epistemology, aesthetics, ontology, ethics, and politics, which are based on the human being as a point of reference. Humanism refers to any perspective which is committed to the centrality and interests of human beings. It also refers to a belief that reason and autonomy are the basic aspects of human existence, and that the foundation for ethics and society is autonomy and moral equality. During the last two centuries, various elements of humanism have been manifested in philosophical views including existentialism, utilitarianism, pragmatism, personalism, and Marxism.

Also in the area of education, the late nineteenth century educational humanist William T. Harris, who was U.S. Commissioner of Education and founder of the Journal of Speculative Philosophy, followed the Enlightenment theory of education that the studies that develop human intellect are those that make humans "most truly human." His "Five Windows of the Soul" (mathematics, geography, history, grammar, and literature/art) were believed especially appropriate for the development of the distinct intellectual faculties such as the analytical, the mathematical, and the linguistic. Harris, an egalitarian who worked to bring education to all children regardless of gender or economic status, believed that education in these subjects provided a "civilizing insight" that was necessary in order for democracy to flourish.

Modern humanist movements

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.

Active in the early 1920s, Ferdinand Canning Scott 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. It referred to humanism as a religion, but denied all supernaturalism and went so far as to affirm that: "Religious humanists regard the universe as self-existing and not created."[3] So, it was hardly religious humansim; it was rather secular humanism. The Manifesto and Potter's book became the cornerstones of modern organizations of secular humanism. They defined religion in secular terms and refused traditional theistic perspectives such as the existence of God and his act of creation.

In 1941, the American Humanist Association was organized. Noted members of The AHA include Isaac Asimov, who was the president before his death, and writer Kurt Vonnegut, who also was president before his death.

Secular and religious humanism

Secular humanism rejects theistic religious belief, and the existence of God or other supernatural being, on the grounds that supernatural beliefs cannot be supported rationally. Secular humanists generally believe that successful ethical, political, and social organization can be accomplished through the use of reason or other faculties of man. Many theorists of modern humanist organizations such as American Humanist Association hold this perspective.

Religious humanism embraces some form of theism, deism, or supernaturalism, without necessarily being allied with organized religion. The existence of God or the divine, and the relationship between God and human beings is seen as an essential aspect of human character, and each individual is endowed with unique value through this relationship. Humanism within organized religion can refer to the appreciation of human qualities as an expression of God, or to a movement to acknowledge common humanity and to serve the needs of the human community. Religious thinkers such as Erasmus, Blaise Pascal, and Jacques Maritain hold this orientation.

Assessment

As long as human beings were created in the image of God, their values and dignity are to be respected. But history shows that they were very often neglected even in the name of God or in the name of an established religious institution like church. So, it was natural that Renaissance humanism occurred in the fourteenth century as a reaction against the religious authoritarianism of Medieval Catholicism. If the Renaissance was a humanist reaction, there was also a faith-oriented reaction, which was the Protestant Reformation. Hence, Medieval Catholicism is said to have been disintegrated into two very different kinds of reactions: Renaissance and Reformation. In the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, there was again religious authoritarianism, which arose from among Lutheranism, Calvinism, Anglicanism, and the Counter-Reformation. Therefore, Enlightenment humanism naturally emerged as a movement against it, and its more faith-oriented counterpart was Pietism. Enlightenment humanism was more advanced in its secular orientation than Renaissance humanism, and its tradition even issued in atheism and Marxism. Today, so-called secular humanism constitutes a great challenge to established religion.

Humanism is an inevitable reaction to theism when it is authoritarian and dogmatic. For a complete understanding of the nature and purpose of human life, humanism and theism are complementary. As the American theologian Reinhold Niebuhr said, a "new synthesis" of Renaissance and Reformation is called for.[4]

Notes

  1. Nicholas Terpstra, Lay Confraternities and Civic Religion in Renaissance Bologna (Cambridge University Press, 2002, ISBN 978-0521522618).
  2. Aram Vartanian, Science and Humanism in the French Enlightenment (Charlottesville, VA: Rookwood Press, 1999, ISBN 978-1886365117).
  3. Humanist Manifesto I American Humanist Association. Retrieved August 19, 2023.
  4. Reinhold Niebuhr, The Nature and Destiny of Man: Volume II Human Destiny (Prentice Hall, 1980, ISBN 978-0684718590).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Ehrenfeld, David W. The Arrogance of Humanism. New York, Oxford University Press, 2003. ISBN 978-0195028904
  • Lamont, Corliss. The Philosophy of Humanism. Humanist Press, 1997. ISBN 978-0931779077
  • Niebuhr, Reinhold. The Nature and Destiny of Man: Volume II Human Destiny. Prentice Hall, 1980. ISBN 978-0684718590
  • Petrosyan, M. Humanism: Its Philosophical, Ethical, and Sociological Aspects. Progress Publishers, 1972. ASIN B0006CBZ24
  • Said, Edward W. Humanism and Democratic Criticism. Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. ISBN 978-1403947109
  • Terpstra, Nicholas. Lay Confraternities and Civic Religion in Renaissance Bologna. Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 978-0521522618
  • Vartanian, Aram. Science and Humanism in the French Enlightenment. Rookwood Press, 1999. ISBN 978-1886365117

External links

All links retrieved August 19, 2023.

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