"Taxonomically, my family is Freethinker (including atheists,
skeptics, agnostics); my genus is Humanist (including the
religion-based), and my species is Secular."
— John Rafferty
Secular. “Pertaining to the world or things not spiritual or sacred.”
Humanism. “Any system of thought or action concerned with the
interests or ideals of people … the intellectual and cultural movement
… characterized by an emphasis on human interests rather than …
religion.”
— Webster’s Dictionary
Secular humanism is a comprehensive, nonreligious lifestance incorporating:
- A naturalistic philosophy
- A cosmic outlook rooted in science
- A consequentialist ethical system
Let’s examine these items one by one:
A comprehensive, nonreligious lifestance
Secular humanism is
comprehensive, touching every aspect of
life including issues of values, meaning, and identity. Thus it is
broader than atheism, which concerns only the nonexistence of god or the
supernatural. Important as that may be, there’s a lot more to life …
and secular humanism addresses it.
Secular humanism is
nonreligious, espousing no belief in a realm or beings imagined to transcend ordinary experience.
Secular humanism is a
lifestance, or what Council for Secular Humanism founder Paul Kurtz has termed a
eupraxsophy: a body of principles suitable for orienting a complete human life. As a
secular lifestance, secular humanism incorporates the Enlightenment principle of
individualism,
which celebrates emancipating the
individual from traditional controls by family, church, and state,
increasingly empowering each of us to set the terms of his or her own
life.
A naturalistic philosophy
Secular humanism is philosophically
naturalistic. It holds
that nature (the world of everyday physical experience) is all there
is, and that reliable knowledge is best obtained when we query nature
using the scientific method. Naturalism asserts that supernatural
entities like God do not exist, and warns us that knowledge gained
without appeal to the natural world and without impartial review by
multiple observers is unreliable.
A cosmic outlook rooted in science
Secular humanism provides a
cosmic outlook—a world-view in
the broadest sense, grounding our lives in the context of our universe
and relying on methods demonstrated by science. Secular humanists see
themselves as undesigned, unintended beings who arose through evolution,
possessing unique attributes of self-awareness and moral agency.
A consequentialist ethical system
Secular humanists hold that ethics is
consequential, to be
judged by results. This is in contrast to so-called command ethics, in
which right and wrong are defined in advance and attributed to divine
authority. “No god will save us,” declared
Humanist Manifesto II
(1973), “we must save ourselves.” Secular humanists seek to develop and
improve their ethical principles by examining the results they yield
in the lives of real men and women.
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