A Secular Humanist Declaration

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A Secular Humanist Declaration was an argument for and statement of support for

Council for Secular Humanism (CSH).[1] Compiled by Paul Kurtz, it is largely a restatement of the content of the American Humanist Association's 1973 Humanist Manifesto II, of which he was co-author with Edwin H. Wilson. Both Wilson and Kurtz had served as editors of The Humanist
, from which Kurtz departed in 1979 and thereafter set about establishing his own movement and his own periodical. His Secular Humanist Declaration was the starting point for these enterprises.

Table of Contents

  1. Free Inquiry
  2. Separation of Church and State
  3. The Ideal of Freedom
  4. Ethics Based on Critical Intelligence
  5. Moral Education
  6. Religious Skepticism
  7. Reason
  8. Science and Technology
  9. Evolution
  10. Education

Signatories

Before the list of signatories, the declaration has the following disclaimer: "Although we who endorse this declaration may not agree with all its specific provisions, we nevertheless support its general purposes and direction and believe that it is important that they be enunciated and implemented. We call upon all men and women of good will who agree with us to join in helping to keep alive the commitment to the principles of free inquiry and the secular humanist outlook. We submit that the decline of these values could have ominous implications for the future of civilization on this planet."[1]

United States

Canada

France

Great Britain (i.e. Scotland, Wales and England)

  • Sir
    A.J. Ayer
    (professor of philosophy, Oxford University)
  • H.J. Blackham
    (former chairman, Social Morality Council and British Humanist Association)
  • Bernard Crick (professor of politics, Birkbeck College, London University)
  • Sir Raymond Firth (professor emeritus of anthropology, University of London)
  • Jim Herrick (then editor of The Freethinker)
  • Zhores A. Medvedev
    (Russian dissident; Medical Research Council)
  • Dora Russell (Mrs. Bertrand Russell) (author)
  • Lord Ritchie-Calder
    (president, Rationalist Press Association)
  • Harry Stopes-Roe (senior lecturer in science studies, University of Birmingham; chairman, British Humanist Association)
  • Nicolas Walter (editor, New Humanist)
  • Baroness
    Barbara Wootton
    (Deputy Speaker, House of Lords)

India

  • B. Shah (president, Indian Secular Society; director, Institute for the Study of Indian Traditions)
  • V. M. Tarkunde (Supreme Court Judge, chairman, Indian Radical Humanist Association)

Israel

Norway

Yugoslavia

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Secular Humanist Declaration". University of Vienna. Retrieved 21 February 2024.

External links