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Just checking, did you mean to post this in "Discuss individual Religions" ? as it means only Secular (non-theist) humanists can answer........PM me if you want this in a general forum.gnostic said:Humanism could mean different things to different people, so what does humanism mean to you, personally?
Humanism could mean different things to different people, so what does humanism mean to you, personally?
imagist said:Humanism, to me, means faith in humankind. While I view this as more realistic than theism, I prefer to call myself a naturalist. I see humans as having both positive and negative potential (and the whole range of greys in between). Having faith in humans is, in my opinion naive. It would be better, I think, to have faith in the laws of the natural universe. These, unlike humans, do not change - only our understanding of them does.
Of course lack of faith in humanity leaves us with a lot we don't know, for example in ethics. But that's the price we pay for internally consistent beliefs.
storm said:I understand humanism as the belief that, whether there is a God or not, we ultimately have to figure morality out for ourselves, and that we have the tools to do so. This to me is a sacred duty.
I think that's it's main purpose. Am I missing something, in your view?So do you think that humanism referred to or only means "morality"?
storm said:I think that's it's main purpose. Am I missing something, in your view?
Secular philosophy is religiously neutral, not atheistic. There are many spiritual humanists like myself, who believe in God.isn't most humanism centered around secular philosophy, thus assuming there is no God(s)?