1460 lines
67 KiB
Plaintext
1460 lines
67 KiB
Plaintext
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From ai815@freenet.carleton.caMon Aug 21 11:10:46 1995
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Date: Wed, 29 Mar 1995 05:26:09 -0500
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From: Greg Erwin <ai815@freenet.carleton.ca>
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To: 72724.3223@compuserve.com, Carol.Roberts@mixcom.com,
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depearce@lexmark.com, breton@macpost.scar.utoronto.ca, tseditor@aol.com,
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TomwFlynn@aol.com, albert.4@postbox.acs.ohio-state.edu,
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gilletta@uwstout.edu, jimdew@macc.wisc.edu, aa357@freenet.buffalo.edu,
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freethnker@aol.com, Jamie.Enns@Eng.Sun.COM, darwnfsh@usa.net,
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LaHumanist@aol.com, kris.taylor@smorgasboard.org, lloydk@teleport.com,
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ry94ad@badger.ac.brocku.ca, apabel@prairienet.org, perfecto@pcnet.com,
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Eric.M.Kidd@Dartmouth.Edu, ftp@locust.cic.net, rblair@shl.com
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Subject: April 1995 Nullifidian
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Here it is.
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############################################################
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############################################################
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______
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/ / / /
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/ /__ __
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/ / ) (__
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/ / (__(__
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__
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| \ | / / . _/_ . __ / . __ __
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| \ | / / / / ) / ) / / ) __ ) / )
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) \| (__(__(___(__(__(___(__(__(__(__(__(__/ (__
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===========================================================
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*The*E-Zine*of*Atheistic*Secular*Humanism*and*Freethought**
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===========================================================
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############################################################
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###### Volume II, Number 4 ***A Collector's Item!***#####
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################### ISSN 1201-0111 #######################
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####################### APR 1995 ###########################
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############################################################
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nullifidian, n. & a. (Person) having no religious faith or
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belief. [f. med. L _nullifidius_ f. L _nullus_ none +
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_fides_ faith; see -IAN] Concise Oxford Dictionary
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The purpose of this magazine is to provide a source of
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articles dealing with many aspects of humanism.
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We are ATHEISTIC as we do not believe in the actual
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existence of any supernatural beings or any transcendental
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reality.
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We are SECULAR because the evidence of history and the daily
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horrors in the news show the pernicious and destructive
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consequences of allowing religions to be involved with
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politics or government.
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We are HUMANISTS and we focus on what is good for humanity,
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in the real world. We will not be put off with offers of
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pie in the sky, bye and bye.
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############################################################
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############################################################
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=><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><==
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|| Begging portion of the Zine ||
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==><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><==
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There is no charge for receiving this, and there is no
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charge for distributing copies to any electronic medium.
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Nor is there a restriction on printing a copy for use in
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discussion. You may not charge to do so, and you may not do
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so without attributing it to the proper author and source.
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If you would like to support our efforts, and help us
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acquire better equipment to bring you more and better
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articles, you may send money to Greg Erwin at: 100,
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Terrasse Eardley / Aylmer, Qc / J9H 6B5 / CANADA. Or buy
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our atheist quote address labels, and other fine products,
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see "Shameless advertising and crass commercialism" below.
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=><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><=
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|| End of Begging portion of the Zine ||
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=><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><====><=
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Articles will be welcomed and very likely used IF:
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(
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they are emailed to:
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((ai815@FreeNet.Carleton.CA; or,
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godfree@magi.com), or
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sent on diskette to me at the above Aylmer address in
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any format that an IBM copy of WordPerfect can read;
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) and
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they don't require huge amounts of editing; and
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I like them.
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I will gladly reprint articles from your magazine, local
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group's newsletter, or original material. There are
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currently about 140 subscribers, plus each issue is posted
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in some newsgroups and is archived as noted elsewhere.
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If you wish to receive a subscription, email a simple
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request to either address, with a clear request
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for a subscription. It will be assumed that the "Reply
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to:" address is where it is to be sent.
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We will automate this process as soon as we know how.
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Yes, please DO make copies! (*)
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Please DO send copies of The Nullifidian to anyone who might
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be interested.
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The only limitations are:
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You must copy the whole document, without making any changes
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to it. Or, at least clearly indicate the source, and how to
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subscribe.
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You do NOT have permission to copy this document for
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commercial purposes.
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The contents of this document are copyright (c) 1995, Greg
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Erwin (insofar as possible) and are on deposit at the
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National Library of Canada
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You may find back issues in any place that archives
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alt.atheism. Currently, all back issues are posted at
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the Humanist Association of Ottawa's area on the National
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Capital Freenet. telnet to 134.117.1.22, and enter <go
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humanism> at the "Your choice==>" prompt.
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ARCHIVES
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Arrangements have been made with etext at umich. ftp to
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etext.umich.edu directory Nullifidian or lucifers-echo.
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For America On-Line subscribers:
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To access the Freethought Forum on America Online enter
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keyword "Capital", scroll down until you find Freethought
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Forum, double click and you're there. Double click "Files &
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Truth Seeker Articles" and scroll until you find Nullifidian
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files. Double click the file name and a window will open
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giving you the opportunity to display a description of the
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file or download the file.
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And thanks to the people at the _Truth Seeker_, who edited,
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formatted and uploaded the articles to the aol area.
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/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\
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Shameless advertising and crass commercialism:
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\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/
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Atheistic self-stick Avery(tm) address labels. Consisting
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of 210 different quotes, 30 per page, each label 2 5/8" x
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1". This leaves three 49 character lines available for your
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own address, phone number, email, fax or whatever. Each
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sheet is US$2, the entire set of 7 for US$13; 2 sets for
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US$20. Indicate quantity desired. Print address clearly,
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exactly as desired. Order from address in examples below.
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Laser printed, 8 pt Arial, with occasional flourishes.
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[NOT ACTUAL SIZE]
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<-------------------2 5/8"---------------------->
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_________________________________________________
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|"Reality is that which, when you stop believing |/\
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|in it, doesn't go away." [Philip K. Dick] | |
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|Greg Erwin 100 Terrasse Eardley | 1"
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|Aylmer, Qc J9H 6B5 Canada | |
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| email: ai815@FreeNet.Carleton.CA | |
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|________________________________________________|\/
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_________________________________________________
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|"...and when you tell me that your deity made |
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|you in his own image, I reply that he must be |
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|very ugly." [Victor Hugo, writing to clergy] |
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|Greg Erwin 100 Terrasse Eardley |
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|Aylmer, Qc J9H 6B5 Canada Ph: (613) 954-6128 |
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| email: ai815@FreeNet.Carleton.CA |
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|________________________________________________|
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Other stuff for sale:
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Certificate of Baptism Removal and Renunciation of Religion.
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Have your baptism removed, renounce religion, and have a
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neat 8" x 11" fancy certificate, on luxury paper, suitable
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for framing, to commemorate the event! Instant eligibility
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for excommunication! For the already baptism-free:
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Certificate of Freedom from Religion. An official atheistic
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secular humanist stamp of approval for only $10! Pamphlet on
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"how to get excommunicated" included FREE with purchase.
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Poster 8x11: WARNING! This is a religion free zone!
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All religious vows, codes, and commitments are null & void
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herein. Please refrain from contaminating the ideosphere
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with harmful memes through prayer, reverence, holy books,
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proselytizing, prophesying, faith, speaking in tongues or
|
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spirituality. Fight the menace of second-hand faith!
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Humanity sincerely thanks you!
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Tastefully arranged in large point Stencil on luxury paper.
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Order from the same address as above.
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/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\
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============================================================
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Neat books available from H.H. Waldo, Bookseller! Books by
|
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Ingersoll! Heston's 19th Century Freethought Cartoons!
|
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Holy Hatred, by James A. Haught......................$21.95
|
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|
The Trouble With Christmas, (signed by the author)
|
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by Tom "Anti-Claus" Flynn............................$13.95
|
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|
Evolution & the Myth of Creationism,
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by Tim M. Berra......................................$ 8.95
|
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Freethinker's Pictorial Text Book, (1 & 2, separately)
|
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reproduction of 1890 and 1898 books by Watson Heston,
|
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by Bank of Wisdom Freethought Hero Emmet Fields .....$30.00
|
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and many, many more. Ever changing inventory. Friendly
|
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|
letters and news from Robb Marks, Proprietor.
|
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add $2 postage/handling for first book & 0.50 for each
|
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additional book. (All prices US$)
|
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Send 2 first class stamps for H.H. Waldo's current catalog.
|
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(Use international reply coupon, or get hold of US Stamps)
|
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TO:
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H.H Waldo, Bookseller
|
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P.O. Box 350
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Rockton, IL 61072
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or phone 1-800-66WALDO !!!
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tell 'im: "that nullifidian guy sent me!"
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============================================================
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/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\_/=\/=\
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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1. Recent Equipment purchases.
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2. FREETHOUGHT CHAIN LETTER
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3. RELIGION and HATRED they're not supposed to be
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synonymous, are they?
|
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4. Open letter to prayer advocates, (feel free to
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reproduce)
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5. Open letter for the next person that calls Hitler an
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atheist
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6. The Sarva darsana samgraha of Madhava: The doctrine of
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the Carvakas, or Materialists
|
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===========================================================
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|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
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===========================================================
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Recent Equipment purchases and expenses.
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I have registered as a sole proprietor. This makes the
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space in the house used for producing the zine tax
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deductible. It also cost $180. I have recently been able
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to purchase a 386-SX from a friend, but have, as yet, not
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paid for it. (Thank you, Colin, for patience.) I also
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bought a Zoltrix 14.4 voice/fax/data modem. The store
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wanted the money up front. I would eventually like to get a
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decent printer, as I can see that actual printed products
|
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are much more likely to be able to be sold for money. I
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have also signed up with a local provider of a much better
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internet connection, at less than $20 per month. When I can
|
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afford to take the course on setting up a home page, and
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learn how to use all the ftp, telnet, finger and other
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stuff, big changes may happen. I need the time and the
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money to take the course to find out what to do. Further
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down the line are a scanner and OCR software, to be able to
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capture text from newsletters, old books, and so on; and
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then finally an even better computer (486 or Pentium, multi-
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media, CD.) Donations, even purchases, have been few and
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far between. The main purchases have been of the quote
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labels, also few and far between.
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=========================================================
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|| END OF ARTICLE ||
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=========================================================
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"Faith may be defined briefly as an illogical belief in the
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occurrence of the improbable." [H. L. Mencken]
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===========================================================
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|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
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===========================================================
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FREETHOUGHT CHAIN LETTER
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From: "TIMOTHEUS(GORSKI)" <72724.3223@compuserve.com>
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To: BlindCopyReceiver:;
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Subject: Freethought Chain Letter
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Message-ID: <950327023432_72724.3223_FHP30-1@CompuServe.COM>
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Ever get "THE SAINT JUDE LETTER?" It's a chain letter that
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asks you to duplicate and send to others for "luck." Legal,
|
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too, since it's not a money scheme. Richard Dawkins (of
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Selfish Gene and Blind Watchmaker fame) and Oliver
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Goodenough called the St. Jude letter a "mind virus" and a
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"postal parasite" in the 9/1/94 issue of the British journal
|
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NATURE. Below please find a FREETHOUGHT CHAIN LETTER.
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Please send it on to as many others as possible. You don't
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need to be told of the benefits of spreading the message of
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rationalism, or of the dangers of people acting on
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principles other than that of reason. For those of you who
|
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get *The Freethought Exchange,* this is a slightly altered
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"dumbed-down" version of the letter printed in #17. Let's
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send freethought around the world a few times!
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REASON, THE ONLY ORACLE
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You have been sent this letter for a reason. Its message is
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vital to you. It began some 12,000 years ago, somewhere in
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what is now central Europe. A scout for a small band of
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hunters, his name now lost to us, scratched out "bear
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coming" on a stone and threw it to his companions. While
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others fled to safety, two of the tribesmen consulted with
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their shaman, who announced that the bear was a divine
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messenger sent to tell them where to find game. As a result,
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the three were fatally mauled by the bear they had been
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warned of. This is no joke. Send 20 copies of this letter
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to others. Send no money as reason is priceless.
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About the year 340 B.C.E., two Roman traders received this
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letter, urging them to rely on facts and think rationally.
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One of them noticed darkening clouds low on the horizon and
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a slight increase in the wind. He decided to delay his
|
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departure by sea. The other merchant was in a hurry to sell
|
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his goods abroad and paid a seer to tell him that it was a
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good time to set sail. When the worst storm of the century
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struck, the first trader was safe in his house with his ship
|
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tied up at the dock. The other was far out at sea and his
|
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vessel was lost with all hands. Rational thought works.
|
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The world is sorely in need of it. Accordingly, this
|
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message must leave your hands as soon as possible. Do note
|
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the following: the authorities in a major city during the
|
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Middle Ages scorned as blasphemy this letter's call to
|
|||
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reject superstition and choose rational thinking. They
|
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tried to destroy all copies of its message. When the Black
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Death swept into the country, these people and those who
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trusted them packed themselves into churches to pray to
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their God. Many succumbed to the contagion in this way.
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When the letter was again discovered, the Enlightenment and
|
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the Age of Reason followed. Montezuma of the Aztecs
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received this letter at about the time that Cortez landed on
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the coast of Mexico. Having already supposed the Spaniards
|
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to be supernatural visitors, by the time Montezuma realized
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the truth it was too late. Thomas Edison began his long
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career of invention and innovation immediately after
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following the advice of this letter. Marie Curie, Alexander
|
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Graham Bell, Wilbur and Orville Wright, Robert Goddard,
|
|||
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Alexander Fleming, Albert Einstein, and numerous others all
|
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experienced similar remarkable results. Others gained
|
|||
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fortunes after deciding to apply the principles urged by
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|||
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this letter. Remember, send no money. And please don't
|
|||
|
ignore this note. Your very life and the future of humanity
|
|||
|
depend on its message.
|
|||
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LIBERTY OF THOUGHT IS THE LIFE OF THE SOUL
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KNOWLEDGE IS POWER
|
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REASON
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IT WORKS
|
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=========================================================
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|| END OF ARTICLE ||
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=========================================================
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|||
|
The basic test of freedom is perhaps less in what we are
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free to do than in what we are free not to do. --Eric Hoffer
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|||
|
===========================================================
|
|||
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|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
|
|||
|
===========================================================
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|
RELIGION and HATRED they're not supposed to be synonymous,
|
|||
|
are they?
|
|||
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|
|||
|
*In Northern Ireland, on Halloween 1993, Protestant
|
|||
|
terrorists burst into a Catholic pub, shouted "trick or
|
|||
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treat" and opened fire, killing seven and wounding eleven.
|
|||
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*In Bosnia, in 1992, Orthodox Christian Serb gunmen
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herded Muslim families into a basement and tossed in
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|||
|
grenades, then joked that the screams sounded 'just like a
|
|||
|
mosque.'
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*A Catholic man living in Annapolis, Maryland pleaded
|
|||
|
guilty of 1994 to beating his mother to death with a small
|
|||
|
statue of the Virgin Mary.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*A Beverly Hills, Michigan reverend pleaded guilty in
|
|||
|
1991 to robbing 14 banks of $47,000 to pay for his daily use
|
|||
|
of prostitutes. He got seven years in prison.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*A Columbus, Ohio televangelist was sentenced to 104
|
|||
|
years in prison for child pornography and engaging in sex
|
|||
|
with children. He used the video equipment of his church to
|
|||
|
make the "kiddie porn."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*A woman evangelist of Pace, Florida, was charged in
|
|||
|
1990 with telling a mother to beat her baby daughter in
|
|||
|
order to drive out six demons. The mother pleaded guilty to
|
|||
|
pummeling the infant to death and the evangelist was
|
|||
|
convicted of first degree murder, and sentenced to life in
|
|||
|
prison.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
*In Oregon in 1993, a fundamentalist woman shot an
|
|||
|
abortionist clinic doctor and called it "the most holy, the
|
|||
|
most righteous thing I've ever done." A Florida man who
|
|||
|
killed an abortion clinic doctor was called a "hero" by a
|
|||
|
fundamentalist magazine.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HOLY HATRED
|
|||
|
^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|||
|
Religious Conflicts of the '90s
|
|||
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|||
|
James A. Haught
|
|||
|
ISBN 0-87975-922-4/cloth/$21.95/225pgs/photos
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Order your copy today!
|
|||
|
Phone 800-421-0351
|
|||
|
Fax (716)-691-0137
|
|||
|
Immediate shipment..
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Prometheus Books; 59 John Glenn Drive, Amherst, NY 14228
|
|||
|
=========================================================
|
|||
|
|| END OF ARTICLE ||
|
|||
|
=========================================================
|
|||
|
"In every country and in every age the priest has been
|
|||
|
hostile to liberty; he is always in allegiance to the
|
|||
|
despot, abetting his abuses in return for protection of his
|
|||
|
own." [Thomas Jefferson]
|
|||
|
===========================================================
|
|||
|
|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
|
|||
|
===========================================================
|
|||
|
Open letter to prayer advocates, (feel free to reproduce)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You recently have called for support for "the traditional
|
|||
|
right to have prayer in schools." I do not know where you
|
|||
|
find such a right. The whole thrust of the constitution,
|
|||
|
the Bill of Rights and the commentary on these documents by
|
|||
|
the founders of America indicates an overwhelming desire to
|
|||
|
be free from such falsely named "liberties."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
James Madison and Thomas Jefferson refused to proclaim days
|
|||
|
of fast and thanksgiving, because this would be perceived as
|
|||
|
an entanglement of government and religion. Other early
|
|||
|
presidents felt and acted the same. They were well
|
|||
|
acquainted with, and had a fear of the pernicious aspects of
|
|||
|
an established church, an idea which they loathed as much as
|
|||
|
they hated the ideas of aristocracy and monarchy. No early
|
|||
|
leader would have accepted a knighthood, as did George Bush,
|
|||
|
such an action would have been repellent to their
|
|||
|
egalitarian convictions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Let us first establish what we are considering. Private
|
|||
|
prayer has, or course, never been banned. Any person too
|
|||
|
lazy to study, or who feels comfort in so doing may offer up
|
|||
|
private prayer at any time in any place. What is prohibited
|
|||
|
is government sponsored prayer, which has serious coercive
|
|||
|
aspects, especially in a school context where the victims
|
|||
|
would be young, impressionable children.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The history of the objection to the idea of an established
|
|||
|
church and forced attendance at prayers and services (as
|
|||
|
well as government collection of tithes and other
|
|||
|
"donations") is not a history of atheists and communists
|
|||
|
trying to break down piety, but that of dissident religious
|
|||
|
sects trying to freely practice their beliefs according to
|
|||
|
their consciences. You should be well aware that in Great
|
|||
|
Britain, the fight for the right not to join the established
|
|||
|
church took centuries to win. Before it was won, many
|
|||
|
dissident sectarians, such as Quakers, Methodists and
|
|||
|
Plymouth Brethren (it seems strange that such mainstream
|
|||
|
folks were once considered dangerous cultists) were
|
|||
|
tortured, died, paid fines and served prison sentences
|
|||
|
rather than violate their consciences, by going to
|
|||
|
established church services or paying to support them.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I am sure that, at the time, many Anglicans were outraged
|
|||
|
that such radicals wanted to deny them their "traditional
|
|||
|
liberty" to have Anglican services in schools and at work,
|
|||
|
sponsored and paid for by the government with tax funds
|
|||
|
collected from everybody. Of course, in Catholic countries,
|
|||
|
everybody has the "right" to be subjected to Catholic
|
|||
|
services and prayers, (and to pay for them); and in most
|
|||
|
Muslim countries, your "traditional liberty" is currently
|
|||
|
the law of the land, and anyone who doesn't participate in
|
|||
|
Islamic prayer and services is in danger of life, limb and
|
|||
|
liberty. Christian evangelization is outlawed and, in many
|
|||
|
countries, such as Saudi Arabia, public Christian services
|
|||
|
may not be held. What makes you think that your church will
|
|||
|
be the state church?
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Because of the history of coercion which they had seen in
|
|||
|
Catholic and Protestant Europe and experienced under the
|
|||
|
Church of England, the founders of America determined that
|
|||
|
the best system would be one in which everybody had the
|
|||
|
right to practice a religion, but in which no one would be
|
|||
|
forced to practice or support any particular religion, or
|
|||
|
indeed, any religion at all.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The horrors of the Inquisition, and then, Protestant
|
|||
|
reaction to Catholic tortures were fresh. Books of martyrs
|
|||
|
were the stuff of children's reading lists. Protestants
|
|||
|
burned at the stake by Catholics, Quakers hanged by
|
|||
|
Puritans, Catholics beheaded by Anglicans; for good reason,
|
|||
|
the founders of the United States wanted to avoid the
|
|||
|
consequences of a state religion.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If these legal and historical arguments do not sway you,
|
|||
|
could you please consider the effect that being labelled an
|
|||
|
outsider and "different" has on a young child. I know Jews,
|
|||
|
Muslims, atheists and Hindus, who had miserable school
|
|||
|
experiences because they were singled out as different,
|
|||
|
because the Christians in the school insisted on staging
|
|||
|
public coercive prayers, in which they could not, in
|
|||
|
conscience, participate. You may not believe this, but
|
|||
|
atheists have a conscience and this conscience does not
|
|||
|
permit them to lie by pretending to pray. Many Catholics do
|
|||
|
not feel they can participate in Protestant prayers; Jews
|
|||
|
and other non Christians are excluded as well.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Is it not simpler, fairer and more compassionate to let each
|
|||
|
person be religious (or not) in the way that he or she
|
|||
|
wishes? People can pray communally in church before and
|
|||
|
after work or school and all weekend. People can pray
|
|||
|
privately all day long, if they so desire. What they should
|
|||
|
not be able to do is to force others into a religious
|
|||
|
practice, which violates their conscience, and currently
|
|||
|
violates the law of the land.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I am hoping that in a future article you will admit your
|
|||
|
error and stress that you do not sanction coercing others
|
|||
|
into Christian religious practices. As well, you should
|
|||
|
study the writings of the founders of the United States and
|
|||
|
become acquainted with their revulsion toward an
|
|||
|
establishment of religion, and the major steps they took to
|
|||
|
avoid it, or indeed, even the appearance of it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I will close by stressing that this is not an attack on
|
|||
|
religion, nor on prayer, or on any other religious practice;
|
|||
|
it is simply a request that you recognize that the American
|
|||
|
tradition is one of freedom to freely practice any religion,
|
|||
|
(as long as no laws are broken) as well as the freedom not
|
|||
|
to practice religion. The tradition is also that the
|
|||
|
government does not support any particular religion,
|
|||
|
including even a vaguely defined Christianity, and should
|
|||
|
not support religion or religious activity in any way. This
|
|||
|
last "tradition" is being sadly eroded of late. I am sure
|
|||
|
that you would object (and rightly so) if any of your tax
|
|||
|
money was spent on promoting a cult such as Scientology, or
|
|||
|
the "Church" of Satan. I, too, feel that my tax money
|
|||
|
should not be spent on religion, while at the same time
|
|||
|
wholeheartedly supporting the freedom of each and every
|
|||
|
person to practice or not practice religion, whether in
|
|||
|
private or in groups.
|
|||
|
=========================================================
|
|||
|
|| END OF ARTICLE ||
|
|||
|
=========================================================
|
|||
|
"While we are under the tyranny of Priests [...] it will
|
|||
|
ever be in their interest, to invalidate the law of nature
|
|||
|
and reason, in order to establish systems incompatible
|
|||
|
therewith." [Ethan Allen, _Reason the Only Oracle of Man_]
|
|||
|
===========================================================
|
|||
|
|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
|
|||
|
===========================================================
|
|||
|
Open letter for the next person that calls Hitler an atheist
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Feel free to use this, edited in any way you like, (same
|
|||
|
applies to the previous letter) the next time someone refers
|
|||
|
to the Nazis as atheists, or remarks that Hitler was an
|
|||
|
atheist. This one went to The American Spectator. Changing
|
|||
|
the first two paragraphs to reflect the specific offence
|
|||
|
that you note should do the trick.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Dear Editor:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Your book review of Cultures in Conflict: Christians,
|
|||
|
Muslims and Jews in the Age of Discovery by Bernard Lewis,
|
|||
|
reviewed by Francis X. Rocca, contained a totally inaccurate
|
|||
|
and slanderous insult to atheists when talking about the
|
|||
|
destruction of the Jewish community of Salonika: that the
|
|||
|
worst fanatics of the past were no match for the atheistic
|
|||
|
killers of our own century.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Perhaps Mr Rocca's Catholicism is his motivation for
|
|||
|
displacing the blame for the murders of the Jews and others
|
|||
|
from Herr Hitler, life-long Catholic and ally of the Pope,
|
|||
|
onto atheists, but the lie just does not work. Hitler and
|
|||
|
the Nazis in Germany found no conflict between their desire
|
|||
|
to murder the Jews of Europe and their Christianity. In
|
|||
|
fact, the history of Christianity was their ally, and an
|
|||
|
inspiration to them. I apologize if Francis X. Rocca is not
|
|||
|
a Catholic.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For instance, the writings and sermons of Luther provided
|
|||
|
ample justification for killing Jews and considering them to
|
|||
|
be subhuman creatures. The yellow star on the sleeve, the
|
|||
|
ghetto, denial of citizenship, and restriction of
|
|||
|
opportunity in business and employment, quotas in
|
|||
|
universities, as well as calculated and casual murder, were
|
|||
|
all Christian traditions of long standing revived by the
|
|||
|
Nazis. It was the atheists and humanists of the
|
|||
|
Enlightenment who forced the Catholic and state Protestant
|
|||
|
churches of Europe to abolish these disgusting Christian
|
|||
|
practices. It was the Christians throughout Europe who
|
|||
|
fought against the Enlightenment, with its radical notions
|
|||
|
of science, secularism and egalitarianism, until their
|
|||
|
champion, Hitler, reintroduced the practices of medieval
|
|||
|
Christianity, with their full approval. Until he started to
|
|||
|
lose.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In North America, the Catholic priest Father Coughlin had an
|
|||
|
extremely popular anti-Semitic pro-Nazi radio show
|
|||
|
throughout the 30s. In Catholic Quebec, the nationalist
|
|||
|
Abb<EFBFBD> Groulx contributed essay after essay in Le Devoir
|
|||
|
admiring Germany and recommending that Quebec Catholics
|
|||
|
follow Hitler's example. And Canada's Prime Minister,
|
|||
|
commenting on the possibility of admitting Jewish refugees,
|
|||
|
cracked the witticism, "None is too many," happily leaving
|
|||
|
them to their fate.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
>From the earliest anti-Semitic lies placed in the Bible in
|
|||
|
regard to "blood guilt," through the crusades, which often
|
|||
|
began with some warm-up slaughtering of the local Jews to
|
|||
|
get the Crusaders into the proper frame of mind for killing
|
|||
|
other non Christians in the Holy Land, right up to the Nazis
|
|||
|
and their Christian collaborators throughout Europe, (there
|
|||
|
were willing and eager Jew hunters in every conquered
|
|||
|
country, Christians, every one) and even to the post war
|
|||
|
Catholics who provided sanctuary and refuge for Nazi war
|
|||
|
criminals on the run, to Popes who honour former Nazis with
|
|||
|
knighthoods; hatred and murder of Jews has been a basic part
|
|||
|
of the holy Christian religion. We honour those who aided
|
|||
|
Jews to escape the Nazi net because their help and heroism
|
|||
|
were exceptional, and not the rule.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I believe it was when the Nazis started losing the war that
|
|||
|
many former allies suddenly began to recognize certain of
|
|||
|
their errors. If we hope to learn from history, we must not
|
|||
|
let self-serving Christians substitute their lies for
|
|||
|
reality.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For those Christians who have started believing their own
|
|||
|
lies, and think that Big Brother can rewrite history and
|
|||
|
thereby erase what actually occurred, I might recommend Lucy
|
|||
|
Davidovitz's War Against the Jews, which has a through
|
|||
|
analysis of the Christian roots of the anti-Semitism that
|
|||
|
culminated in the Holocaust. By the way, this century was
|
|||
|
hardly the first time that organized Christians committed
|
|||
|
mass murders of Jews.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Nazis actually had implemented many of the policies that
|
|||
|
modern Republicans and conservative Christians are
|
|||
|
clamouring for: they had a state church, daily prayers in
|
|||
|
the schools and compulsory creedal statements; they forbade
|
|||
|
abortions, rejected feminism, outlawed homosexuality, and
|
|||
|
would not allow non Christians in government or business.
|
|||
|
The Nazis were not atheists, they were the Christian
|
|||
|
Coalition in power. They were allies of the Pope, and were
|
|||
|
acknowledged by Christians throughout the world as bulwarks
|
|||
|
against atheistic socialism and defenders of western
|
|||
|
Christian civilization. Until they began to lose.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
I will admit that it is possible that your reviewer is
|
|||
|
simply an incompetent researcher and grossly ignorant of
|
|||
|
history, rather than a deliberate liar.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Please print this and retract the lie.
|
|||
|
=========================================================
|
|||
|
|| END OF ARTICLE ||
|
|||
|
=========================================================
|
|||
|
'...the Bible as we have it contains elements that are
|
|||
|
scientifically incorrect or even morally repugnant. No
|
|||
|
amount of "explaining away" can convince us that such
|
|||
|
passages are the product of Divine Wisdom.' -- Bernard J.
|
|||
|
Bamberger, _The Story of Judaism_
|
|||
|
===========================================================
|
|||
|
|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
|
|||
|
===========================================================
|
|||
|
This is a medieval text from India. There was a materialist
|
|||
|
school of philosophy. The religious people brought forward
|
|||
|
their usual (and only) counter-arguments: murder and book
|
|||
|
burning. This fragment survives in a quote by an opponent.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Sarva darsana samgraha of Madhava
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The doctrine of the Carvakas, or Materialists
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is no heaven, no final liberation, nor any soul in
|
|||
|
another world,
|
|||
|
Nor do the actions of the four castes, orders, etc., produce
|
|||
|
any real effect.
|
|||
|
The Agnihotra, the three Vedas, the ascetics's three staves,
|
|||
|
and smearing one's self with ashes,
|
|||
|
Were made by Nature as the livelihood of those destitute of
|
|||
|
knowledge and manliness.
|
|||
|
If a beast slain in the Jyotistoma rite will itself go to
|
|||
|
heaven,
|
|||
|
Why then does not the sacrificer forthwith offer his own
|
|||
|
father?
|
|||
|
If the Sraddha produces gratification to beings who are
|
|||
|
dead,
|
|||
|
Then here, too, in the case of travellers when they start,
|
|||
|
it is needless to give provisions for the journey.
|
|||
|
If beings in heaven are gratified by our offering the
|
|||
|
Sraddha here,
|
|||
|
Then why not give the food down below to those who are
|
|||
|
standing on the housetop?
|
|||
|
While life remains let a man live happily, let him feed on
|
|||
|
ghee even though he runs in debt;
|
|||
|
When once the body becomes ashes, how can it ever return
|
|||
|
again?
|
|||
|
If he who departs from the body goes to another world,
|
|||
|
How is it that he comes not back again, restless for love of
|
|||
|
his kindred?
|
|||
|
Hence it is only as a means of livelihood that Brahmins have
|
|||
|
established here
|
|||
|
All these ceremonies for the dead,<2C><>there is no other fruit
|
|||
|
anywhere.
|
|||
|
The three authors of the Vedas were buffoons, knaves, and
|
|||
|
demons.
|
|||
|
All the well-known formulae of the pandits, jarphari,
|
|||
|
turphari, etc.
|
|||
|
And all the obscene rites for the queen commanded in the
|
|||
|
Asvamedha,
|
|||
|
These were invented by buffoons, and so all the various
|
|||
|
kinds of presents to the priests,
|
|||
|
While the eating of flesh was similarly commanded by night-
|
|||
|
prowling demons.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The doctrine of the Carvakas, or Materialists
|
|||
|
Free Translation
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you are not familiar with all of the specifically Hindu
|
|||
|
religious mumbo jumbo, this is a cultural as well as
|
|||
|
linguistic translation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is no heaven, no nirvana, no immortal soul.
|
|||
|
Nor do prayers, sacrifices, or pilgrimages produce any real
|
|||
|
effect.
|
|||
|
Masses, Bibles, priests' robes, and images
|
|||
|
Were put in the world to be the livelihood of the stupid and
|
|||
|
cowardly.
|
|||
|
If baptism removes all sins and the sinless go straight to
|
|||
|
heaven,
|
|||
|
Why not kill your babies as soon as they are baptised?
|
|||
|
If prayers on earth could help the souls of the dead,
|
|||
|
Then there would be no need to give travellers provisions
|
|||
|
for their journey.
|
|||
|
If sacrifices on earth could feed the heavenly host,
|
|||
|
Then a table set on the street could feed the workers on the
|
|||
|
roof.
|
|||
|
While life remains, live happily, eat caviar even though you
|
|||
|
are in debt;
|
|||
|
When the body has rotted, how can it return?
|
|||
|
If the soul of the dead one goes to another world,
|
|||
|
How come love of family doesn't draw it back?
|
|||
|
All of this is a swindle that the priests have established
|
|||
|
here.
|
|||
|
All of the ceremonies for the dead, they don't really do
|
|||
|
anything.
|
|||
|
The authors of all Holy Books were buffoons, knaves and
|
|||
|
crooks.
|
|||
|
All the priestly prayers, "Pater Noster," "Hail Mary," and
|
|||
|
so on
|
|||
|
And all the mumbo jumbo for crowning thieves, kings,
|
|||
|
And all sorts of nonsense whether with water, ashes, oil,
|
|||
|
fire, bread or wine,
|
|||
|
These were invented by fools. And thieves invented presents
|
|||
|
to beggars and priests.
|
|||
|
And cranks invented the prohibitions of different foods.
|
|||
|
===========================================================
|
|||
|
|| BEGINNING OF ARTICLE ||
|
|||
|
===========================================================
|
|||
|
>From the American Humanist Association
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The complete texts of
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
HUMANIST MANIFESTOS I AND II
|
|||
|
=============================
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Humanist Manifesto I
|
|||
|
--------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Manifesto is a product of many minds. It was designed
|
|||
|
to represent a developing point of view, not a new creed.
|
|||
|
The individuals whose signatures appear would, had they been
|
|||
|
writing individual statements, have stated the propositions
|
|||
|
in differing terms. The importance of the document is that
|
|||
|
more than thirty men have come to general agreement on
|
|||
|
matters of final concern and that these men are undoubtedly
|
|||
|
representative of a large number who are forging a new
|
|||
|
philosophy out of the materials of the modern world.
|
|||
|
-- Raymond B. Bragg (1933)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The time has come for widespread recognition of the
|
|||
|
radical changes in religious beliefs throughout the modern
|
|||
|
world. The time is past for mere revision of traditional
|
|||
|
attitudes. Science and economic change have disrupted the
|
|||
|
old beliefs. Religions the world over are under the
|
|||
|
necessity of coming to terms with new conditions created by
|
|||
|
a vastly increased knowledge and experience. In every field
|
|||
|
of human activity, the vital movement is now in the
|
|||
|
direction of a candid and explicit humanism. In order that
|
|||
|
religious humanism may be better understood we, the
|
|||
|
undersigned, desire to make certain affirmations which we
|
|||
|
believe the facts of our contemporary life demonstrate.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is great danger of a final, and we believe fatal,
|
|||
|
identification of the word religion with doctrines and
|
|||
|
methods which have lost their significance and which are
|
|||
|
powerless to solve the problem of human living in the
|
|||
|
Twentieth Century. Religions have always been means for
|
|||
|
realizing the highest values of life. Their end has been
|
|||
|
accomplished through the interpretation of the total
|
|||
|
environing situation (theology or world view), the sense of
|
|||
|
values resulting therefrom (goal or ideal), and the
|
|||
|
technique (cult), established for realizing the satisfactory
|
|||
|
life. A change in any of these factors results in
|
|||
|
alteration of the outward forms of religion. This fact
|
|||
|
explains the changefulness of religions through the
|
|||
|
centuries. But through all changes religion itself remains
|
|||
|
constant in its quest for abiding values, an inseparable
|
|||
|
feature of human life.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Today man's larger understanding of the universe, his
|
|||
|
scientific achievements, and deeper appreciation of
|
|||
|
brotherhood, have created a situation which requires a new
|
|||
|
statement of the means and purposes of religion. Such a
|
|||
|
vital, fearless, and frank religion capable of furnishing
|
|||
|
adequate social goals and personal satisfactions may appear
|
|||
|
to many people as a complete break with the past. While
|
|||
|
this age does owe a vast debt to the traditional religions,
|
|||
|
it is none the less obvious that any religion that can hope
|
|||
|
to be a synthesizing and dynamic force for today must be
|
|||
|
shaped for the needs of this age. To establish such a
|
|||
|
religion is a major necessity of the present. It is a
|
|||
|
responsibility which rests upon this generation. We
|
|||
|
therefore affirm the following:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FIRST: Religious humanists regard the universe as
|
|||
|
self-existing and not created.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SECOND: Humanism believes that man is a part of nature and
|
|||
|
that he has emerged as a result of a continuous process.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THIRD: Holding an organic view of life, humanists find that
|
|||
|
the traditional dualism of mind and body must be rejected.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FOURTH: Humanism recognizes that man's religious culture
|
|||
|
and civilization, as clearly depicted by anthropology and
|
|||
|
history, are the product of a gradual development due to his
|
|||
|
interaction with his natural environment and with his social
|
|||
|
heritage. The individual born into a particular culture is
|
|||
|
largely molded by that culture.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FIFTH: Humanism asserts that the nature of the universe
|
|||
|
depicted by modern science makes unacceptable any
|
|||
|
supernatural or cosmic guarantees of human values.
|
|||
|
Obviously humanism does not deny the possibility of
|
|||
|
realities as yet undiscovered, but it does insist that the
|
|||
|
way to determine the existence and value of any and all
|
|||
|
realities is by means of intelligent inquiry and by the
|
|||
|
assessment of their relations to human needs. Religion must
|
|||
|
formulate its hopes and plans in the light of the scientific
|
|||
|
spirit and method.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SIXTH: We are convinced that the time has passed for
|
|||
|
theism, deism, modernism, and the several varieties of "new
|
|||
|
thought".
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SEVENTH: Religion consists of those actions, purposes, and
|
|||
|
experiences which are humanly significant. Nothing human is
|
|||
|
alien to the religious. It includes labor, art, science,
|
|||
|
philosophy, love, friendship, recreation -- all that is in
|
|||
|
its degree expressive of intelligently satisfying human
|
|||
|
living. The distinction between the sacred and the secular
|
|||
|
can no longer be maintained.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EIGHTH: Religious Humanism considers the complete
|
|||
|
realization of human personality to be the end of man's life
|
|||
|
and seeks its development and fulfillment in the here and
|
|||
|
now. This is the explanation of the humanist's social
|
|||
|
passion.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NINTH: In the place of the old attitudes involved in
|
|||
|
worship and prayer the humanist finds his religious emotions
|
|||
|
expressed in a heightened sense of personal life and in a
|
|||
|
cooperative effort to promote social well-being.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TENTH: It follows that there will be no uniquely religious
|
|||
|
emotions and attitudes of the kind hitherto associated with
|
|||
|
belief in the supernatural.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEVENTH: Man will learn to face the crises of life in
|
|||
|
terms of his knowledge of their naturalness and probability.
|
|||
|
Reasonable and manly attitudes will be fostered by education
|
|||
|
and supported by custom. We assume that humanism will take
|
|||
|
the path of social and mental hygiene and discourage
|
|||
|
sentimental and unreal hopes and wishful thinking.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TWELFTH: Believing that religion must work increasingly for
|
|||
|
joy in living, religious humanists aim to foster the
|
|||
|
creative in man and to encourage achievements that add to
|
|||
|
the satisfactions of life.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THIRTEENTH: Religious humanism maintains that all
|
|||
|
associations and institutions exist for the fulfillment of
|
|||
|
human life. The intelligent evaluation, transformation,
|
|||
|
control, and direction of such associations and institutions
|
|||
|
with a view to the enhancement of human life is the purpose
|
|||
|
and program of humanism. Certainly religious institutions,
|
|||
|
their ritualistic forms, ecclesiastical methods, and
|
|||
|
communal activities must be reconstituted as rapidly as
|
|||
|
experience allows, in order to function effectively in the
|
|||
|
modern world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FOURTEENTH: The humanists are firmly convinced that
|
|||
|
existing acquisitive and profit-motivated society has shown
|
|||
|
itself to be inadequate and that a radical change in
|
|||
|
methods, controls, and motives must be instituted. A
|
|||
|
socialized and cooperative economic order must be
|
|||
|
established to the end that the equitable distribution of
|
|||
|
the means of life be possible. The goal of humanism is a
|
|||
|
free and universal society in which people voluntarily and
|
|||
|
intelligently cooperate for the common good. Humanists
|
|||
|
demand a shared life in a shared world.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FIFTEENTH AND LAST: We assert that humanism will: (a)
|
|||
|
affirm life rather than deny it; (b) seek to elicit the
|
|||
|
possibilities of life, not flee from them; and (c) endeavor
|
|||
|
to establish the conditions of a satisfactory life for all,
|
|||
|
not merely for the few. By this positive morale and
|
|||
|
intention humanism will be guided, and from this perspective
|
|||
|
and alignment the techniques and efforts of humanism will
|
|||
|
flow.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So stand the theses of religious humanism. Though we
|
|||
|
consider the religious forms and ideas of our fathers no
|
|||
|
longer adequate, the quest for the good life is still the
|
|||
|
central task for mankind. Man is at last becoming aware that
|
|||
|
he alone is responsible for the realization of the world of
|
|||
|
his dreams, that he has within him- self the power for its
|
|||
|
achievement. He must set intelligence and will to the task.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EDITOR'S NOTE: There were 34 signers of this document,
|
|||
|
including Anton J. Carlson, John Dewey, John H. Dietrich, R.
|
|||
|
Lester Mondale, Charles Francis Potter, Curtis W. Reese, and
|
|||
|
Edwin H. Wilson.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
===========================================================
|
|||
|
Humanist Manifesto II
|
|||
|
---------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-- Preface --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
It is forty years since Humanist Manifesto I (1933)
|
|||
|
appeared. Events since then make that earlier statement seem
|
|||
|
far too optimistic. Nazism has shown the depths of
|
|||
|
brutality of which humanity is capable. Other totalitarian
|
|||
|
regimes have suppressed human rights without ending poverty.
|
|||
|
Science has sometimes brought evil as well as good. Recent
|
|||
|
decades have shown that inhuman wars can be made in the name
|
|||
|
of peace. The beginnings of police states, even in
|
|||
|
democratic societies, widespread government espionage, and
|
|||
|
other abuses of power by military, political, and industrial
|
|||
|
elites, and the continuance of unyielding racism, all
|
|||
|
present a different and difficult social outlook. In
|
|||
|
various societies, the demands of women and minority groups
|
|||
|
for equal rights effectively challenge our generation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As we approach the twenty-first century, however, an
|
|||
|
affirmative and hopeful vision is needed. Faith,
|
|||
|
commensurate with advancing knowledge, is also necessary.
|
|||
|
In the choice between despair and hope, humanists respond in
|
|||
|
this Humanist Manifesto II with a positive declaration for
|
|||
|
times of uncertainty.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
As in 1933, humanists still believe that traditional theism,
|
|||
|
especially faith in the prayer-hearing God, assumed to live
|
|||
|
and care for persons, to hear and understand their prayers,
|
|||
|
and to be able to do something about them, is an unproved
|
|||
|
and outmoded faith. Salvationism, based on mere
|
|||
|
affirmation, still appears as harmful, diverting people with
|
|||
|
false hopes of heaven hereafter. Reasonable minds look to
|
|||
|
other means for survival.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Those who sign Humanist Manifesto II disclaim that they are
|
|||
|
setting forth a binding credo; their individual views would
|
|||
|
be stated in widely varying ways. This statement is,
|
|||
|
however, reaching for vision in a time that needs direction.
|
|||
|
It is social analysis in an effort at consensus. New
|
|||
|
statements should be developed to supersede this, but for
|
|||
|
today it is our conviction that humanism offers an
|
|||
|
alternative that can serve present-day needs and guide
|
|||
|
humankind toward the future.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-- Paul Kurtz and Edwin H. Wilson
|
|||
|
(1973)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The next century can be and should be the humanistic
|
|||
|
century. Dramatic scientific, technological, and
|
|||
|
ever-accelerating social and political changes crowd our
|
|||
|
awareness. We have virtually conquered the planet, explored
|
|||
|
the moon, overcome the natural limits of travel and
|
|||
|
communication; we stand at the dawn of a new age, ready to
|
|||
|
move farther into space and perhaps inhabit other planets.
|
|||
|
Using technology wisely, we can control our environment,
|
|||
|
conquer poverty, markedly reduce disease, extend our
|
|||
|
life-span, significantly modify our behavior, alter the
|
|||
|
course of human evolution and cultural development, unlock
|
|||
|
vast new powers, and provide humankind with unparalleled
|
|||
|
opportunity for achieving an abundant and meaningful life.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The future is, however, filled with dangers. In learning to
|
|||
|
apply the scientific method to nature and human life, we
|
|||
|
have opened the door to ecological damage, over-population,
|
|||
|
dehumanizing institutions, totalitarian repression, and
|
|||
|
nuclear and bio- chemical disaster. Faced with apocalyptic
|
|||
|
prophesies and doomsday scenarios, many flee in despair from
|
|||
|
reason and embrace irrational cults and theologies of
|
|||
|
withdrawal and retreat.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Traditional moral codes and newer irrational cults both fail
|
|||
|
to meet the pressing needs of today and tomorrow. False
|
|||
|
"theologies of hope" and messianic ideologies,
|
|||
|
substituting new dogmas for old, cannot cope with existing
|
|||
|
world realities. They separate rather than unite peoples.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Humanity, to survive, requires bold and daring measures. We
|
|||
|
need to extend the uses of scientific method, not renounce
|
|||
|
them, to fuse reason with compassion in order to build
|
|||
|
constructive social and moral values. Confronted by many
|
|||
|
possible futures, we must decide which to pursue. The
|
|||
|
ultimate goal should be the fulfillment of the potential for
|
|||
|
growth in each human personality -- not for the favored few,
|
|||
|
but for all of humankind. Only a shared world and global
|
|||
|
measures will suffice.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A humanist outlook will tap the creativity of each human
|
|||
|
being and provide the vision and courage for us to work
|
|||
|
together. This outlook emphasizes the role human beings can
|
|||
|
play in their own spheres of action. The decades ahead call
|
|||
|
for dedicated, clear- minded men and women able to marshal
|
|||
|
the will, intelligence, and cooperative skills for shaping a
|
|||
|
desirable future. Humanism can provide the purpose and
|
|||
|
inspiration that so many seek; it can give personal meaning
|
|||
|
and significance to human life.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Many kinds of humanism exist in the contemporary world. The
|
|||
|
varieties and emphases of naturalistic humanism include
|
|||
|
"scientific," "ethical," "democratic," "religious," and
|
|||
|
"Marxist" humanism. Free thought, atheism, agnosticism,
|
|||
|
skepticism, deism, rationalism, ethical culture, and liberal
|
|||
|
religion all claim to be heir to the humanist tradition.
|
|||
|
Humanism traces its roots from ancient China, classical
|
|||
|
Greece and Rome, through the Renaissance and the
|
|||
|
Enlightenment, to the scientific revolution of the modern
|
|||
|
world. But views that merely reject theism are not
|
|||
|
equivalent to humanism. They lack commitment to the
|
|||
|
positive belief in the possibilities of human progress and
|
|||
|
to the values central to it. Many within religious groups,
|
|||
|
believing in the future of humanism, now claim humanist
|
|||
|
credentials. Humanism is an ethical process through which
|
|||
|
we all can move, above and beyond the divisive particulars,
|
|||
|
heroic personalities, dogmatic creeds, and ritual customs
|
|||
|
of past religions or their mere negation.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We affirm a set of common principles that can serve as a
|
|||
|
basis for united action -- positive principles relevant to
|
|||
|
the present human condition. They are a design for a
|
|||
|
secular society on a planetary scale.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
For these reasons, we submit this new Humanist Manifesto for
|
|||
|
the future of humankind; for us, it is a vision of hope, a
|
|||
|
direction for satisfying survival.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-- Religion --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FIRST: In the best sense, religion may inspire dedication
|
|||
|
to the highest ethical ideals. The cultivation of moral
|
|||
|
devotion and creative imagination is an expression of
|
|||
|
genuine "spiritual" experience and aspiration.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We believe, however, that traditional dogmatic or
|
|||
|
authoritarian religions that place revelation, God, ritual,
|
|||
|
or creed above human needs and experience do a disservice to
|
|||
|
the human species. Any account of nature should pass the
|
|||
|
tests of scientific evidence; in our judgment, the dogmas
|
|||
|
and myths of traditional religions do not do so. Even at
|
|||
|
this late date in human history, certain elementary facts
|
|||
|
based upon the critical use of scientific reason have to be
|
|||
|
restated. We find insufficient evidence for belief in the
|
|||
|
existence of a supernatural; it is either meaningless or
|
|||
|
irrelevant to the question of survival and fulfillment of
|
|||
|
the human race. As nontheists, we begin with humans not
|
|||
|
God, nature not deity. Nature may indeed be broader and
|
|||
|
deeper than we now know; any new discoveries, however, will
|
|||
|
but enlarge our knowledge of the natural.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Some humanists believe we should reinterpret traditional
|
|||
|
religions and reinvest them with meanings appropriate to the
|
|||
|
current situation. Such redefinitions, however, often
|
|||
|
perpetuate old dependencies and escapisms; they easily
|
|||
|
become obscurantist, impeding the free use of the intellect.
|
|||
|
We need, instead, radically new human purposes and goals.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We appreciate the need to preserve the best ethical
|
|||
|
teachings in the religious traditions of humankind, many of
|
|||
|
which we share in common. But we reject those features of
|
|||
|
traditional religious morality that deny humans a full
|
|||
|
appreciation of their own potentialities and
|
|||
|
responsibilities. Traditional religions often offer solace
|
|||
|
to humans, but, as often, they inhibit humans from helping
|
|||
|
themselves or experiencing their full potentialities. Such
|
|||
|
institutions, creeds, and rituals often impede the will to
|
|||
|
serve others. Too often traditional faiths encourage
|
|||
|
dependence rather than independence, obedience rather than
|
|||
|
affirmation, fear rather than courage. More recently they
|
|||
|
have generated concerned social action, with many signs of
|
|||
|
relevance appearing in the wake of the "God Is Dead"
|
|||
|
theologies. But we can discover no divine purpose or
|
|||
|
providence for the human species. While there is much that
|
|||
|
we do not know, humans are responsible for what we are or
|
|||
|
will become. No deity will save us; we must save ourselves.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SECOND: Promises of immortal salvation or fear of eternal
|
|||
|
damnation are both illusory and harmful. They distract
|
|||
|
humans from present concerns, from self-actualization, and
|
|||
|
from rectifying social injustices. Modern science
|
|||
|
discredits such historic concepts as the "ghost in the
|
|||
|
machine" and the "separable soul." Rather, science affirms
|
|||
|
that the human species is an emergence from natural
|
|||
|
evolutionary forces. As far as we know, the total
|
|||
|
personality is a function of the biological organism
|
|||
|
transacting in a social and cultural context. There is no
|
|||
|
credible evidence that life survives the death of the body.
|
|||
|
We continue to exist in our progeny and in the way that our
|
|||
|
lives have influenced others in our culture.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Traditional religions are surely not the only obstacles to
|
|||
|
human progress. Other ideologies also impede human advance.
|
|||
|
Some forms of political doctrine, for instance, function
|
|||
|
religiously, reflecting the worst features of orthodoxy and
|
|||
|
authoritarianism, especially when they sacrifice individuals
|
|||
|
on the altar of Utopian promises. Purely economic and
|
|||
|
political viewpoints, whether capitalist or communist, often
|
|||
|
function as religious and ideological dogma. Although
|
|||
|
humans undoubtedly need economic and political goals, they
|
|||
|
also need creative values by which to live.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-- Ethics --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THIRD: We affirm that moral values derive their source from
|
|||
|
human experience. Ethics is autonomous and situational
|
|||
|
needing no theological or ideological sanction. Ethics
|
|||
|
stems from human need and interest. To deny this distorts
|
|||
|
the whole basis of life. Human life has meaning because we
|
|||
|
create and develop our futures. Happiness and the creative
|
|||
|
realization of human needs and desires, individually and in
|
|||
|
shared enjoyment, are continuous themes of humanism. We
|
|||
|
strive for the good life, here and now. The goal is to
|
|||
|
pursue life's enrichment despite debasing forces of
|
|||
|
vulgarization, commercialization, and dehumanization.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FOURTH: Reason and intelligence are the most effective
|
|||
|
instruments that humankind possesses. There is no
|
|||
|
substitute: neither faith nor passion suffices in itself.
|
|||
|
The controlled use of scientific methods, which have
|
|||
|
transformed the natural and social sciences since the
|
|||
|
Renaissance, must be extended further in the solution of
|
|||
|
human problems. But reason must be tempered by humility,
|
|||
|
since no group has a monopoly of wisdom or virtue. Nor is
|
|||
|
there any guarantee that all problems can be solved or all
|
|||
|
questions answered. Yet critical intelligence, infused by a
|
|||
|
sense of human caring, is the best method that humanity has
|
|||
|
for resolving problems. Reason should be balanced with
|
|||
|
compassion and empathy and the whole person fulfilled.
|
|||
|
Thus, we are not advocating the use of scientific
|
|||
|
intelligence independent of or in opposition to emotion, for
|
|||
|
we believe in the cultivation of feeling and love. As
|
|||
|
science pushes back the boundary of the known, humankind's
|
|||
|
sense of wonder is continually renewed, and art, poetry,
|
|||
|
and music find their places, along with religion and ethics.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-- The Individual --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FIFTH: The preciousness and dignity of the individual
|
|||
|
person is a central humanist value. Individuals should be
|
|||
|
encouraged to realize their own creative talents and
|
|||
|
desires. We reject all religious, ideological, or moral
|
|||
|
codes that denigrate the individual, suppress freedom, dull
|
|||
|
intellect, dehumanize personality. We believe in maximum
|
|||
|
individual autonomy consonant with social responsibility.
|
|||
|
Although science can account for the causes of behavior, the
|
|||
|
possibilities of individual freedom of choice exist in human
|
|||
|
life and should be increased.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SIXTH: In the area of sexuality, we believe that intolerant
|
|||
|
attitudes, often cultivated by orthodox religions and
|
|||
|
puritanical cultures, unduly repress sexual conduct. The
|
|||
|
right to birth control, abortion, and divorce should be
|
|||
|
recognized. While we do not approve of exploitive,
|
|||
|
denigrating forms of sexual expression, neither do we wish
|
|||
|
to prohibit, by law or social sanction, sexual behavior
|
|||
|
between consenting adults. The many varieties of sexual
|
|||
|
exploration should not in themselves be considered "evil."
|
|||
|
Without countenancing mindless permissiveness or unbridled
|
|||
|
promiscuity, a civilized society should be a tolerant one.
|
|||
|
Short of harming others or compelling them to do likewise,
|
|||
|
individuals should be permitted to express their sexual
|
|||
|
proclivities and pursue their life-styles as they desire.
|
|||
|
We wish to cultivate the development of a responsible
|
|||
|
attitude toward sexuality, in which humans are not exploited
|
|||
|
as sexual objects, and in which intimacy, sensitivity,
|
|||
|
respect, and honesty in interpersonal relations are
|
|||
|
encouraged. Moral education for children and adults is an
|
|||
|
important way of developing awareness and sexual maturity.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-- Democratic Society --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SEVENTH: To enhance freedom and dignity the individual must
|
|||
|
experience a full range of civil liberties in all societies.
|
|||
|
This includes freedom of speech and the press, political
|
|||
|
democracy, the legal right of opposition to governmental
|
|||
|
policies, fair judicial process, religious liberty, freedom
|
|||
|
of association, and artistic, scientific, and cultural
|
|||
|
freedom. It also includes a recognition of an individual's
|
|||
|
right to die with dignity, euthanasia, and the right to
|
|||
|
suicide. We oppose the increasing invasion of privacy, by
|
|||
|
whatever means, in both totalitarian and democratic
|
|||
|
societies. We would safeguard, extend, and implement the
|
|||
|
principles of human freedom evolved from the Magna Carta to
|
|||
|
the Bill of Rights, the Rights of Man, and the Universal
|
|||
|
Declaration of Human Rights.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
EIGHTH: We are committed to an open and democratic society.
|
|||
|
We must extend participatory democracy in its true sense to
|
|||
|
the economy, the school, the family, the workplace, and
|
|||
|
voluntary associations. Decision-making must be
|
|||
|
decentralized to include widespread involvement of people at
|
|||
|
all levels -- social, political, and economic. All persons
|
|||
|
should have a voice in developing the values and goals that
|
|||
|
determine their lives. Institutions should be responsive to
|
|||
|
expressed desires and needs. The conditions of work,
|
|||
|
education, devotion, and play should be humanized.
|
|||
|
Alienating forces should be modified or eradicated and
|
|||
|
bureaucratic structures should be held to a minimum. People
|
|||
|
are more important than decalogues, rules, proscriptions, or
|
|||
|
regulations.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NINTH: The separation of church and state and the
|
|||
|
separation of ideology and state are imperatives. The state
|
|||
|
should encourage maximum freedom for different moral,
|
|||
|
political, religious, and social values in society. It
|
|||
|
should not favor any particular religious bodies through the
|
|||
|
use of public monies, nor espouse a single ideology and
|
|||
|
function thereby as an instrument of propaganda or
|
|||
|
oppression, particularly against dissenters.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TENTH: Humane societies should evaluate economic systems
|
|||
|
not by rhetoric or ideology, but by whether or not they
|
|||
|
increase economic well-being for all individuals and groups,
|
|||
|
minimize poverty and hardship, increase the sum of human
|
|||
|
satisfaction, and enhance the quality of life. Hence the
|
|||
|
door is open to alternative economic systems. We need to
|
|||
|
democratize the economy and judge it by its responsiveness
|
|||
|
to human needs, testing results in terms of the common good.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ELEVENTH: The principle of moral equality must be furthered
|
|||
|
through elimination of all discrimination based upon race,
|
|||
|
religion, sex, age, or national origin. This means equality
|
|||
|
of opportunity and recognition of talent and merit.
|
|||
|
Individuals should be encouraged to contribute to their own
|
|||
|
betterment. If unable, then society should provide means to
|
|||
|
satisfy their basic economic, health, and cultural needs,
|
|||
|
including, wherever resources make possible, a minimum
|
|||
|
guaranteed annual income. We are concerned for the welfare
|
|||
|
of the aged, the infirm, the disadvantaged, and also for the
|
|||
|
outcasts -- the mentally retarded, abandoned, or abused
|
|||
|
children, the handicapped, prisoners, and addicts -- for all
|
|||
|
who are neglected or ignored by society. Practicing
|
|||
|
humanists should make it their vocation to humanize personal
|
|||
|
relations.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We believe in the right to universal education. Everyone
|
|||
|
has a right to the cultural opportunity to fulfill his or
|
|||
|
her unique capacities and talents. The schools should
|
|||
|
foster satisfying and productive living. They should be
|
|||
|
open at all levels to any and all; the achievement of
|
|||
|
excellence should be encouraged. Innovative and experimental
|
|||
|
forms of education are to be welcomed. The energy and
|
|||
|
idealism of the young deserve to be appreciated and
|
|||
|
channeled to constructive purposes.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We deplore racial, religious, ethnic, or class antagonisms.
|
|||
|
Although we believe in cultural diversity and encourage
|
|||
|
racial and ethnic pride, we reject separations which promote
|
|||
|
alienation and set people and groups against each other; we
|
|||
|
envision an integrated community where people have a maximum
|
|||
|
opportunity for free and voluntary association.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We are critical of sexism or sexual chauvinism -- male or
|
|||
|
female. We believe in equal rights for both women and men to
|
|||
|
fulfill their unique careers and potentialities as they see
|
|||
|
fit, free of invidious discrimination.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-- World Community --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
TWELFTH: We deplore the division of humankind on
|
|||
|
nationalistic grounds. We have reached a turning point in
|
|||
|
human history where the best option is to transcend the
|
|||
|
limits of national sovereignty and to move toward the
|
|||
|
building of a world community in which all sectors of the
|
|||
|
human family can participate. Thus we look to the
|
|||
|
development of a system of world law and a world order based
|
|||
|
upon transnational federal government. This would
|
|||
|
appreciate cultural pluralism and diversity. It would not
|
|||
|
exclude pride in national origins and accomplishments nor
|
|||
|
the handling of regional problems on a regional basis.
|
|||
|
Human progress, however, can no longer be achieved by
|
|||
|
focusing on one section of the world, Western or Eastern,
|
|||
|
developed or underdeveloped. For the first time in human
|
|||
|
history, no part of humankind can be isolated from any
|
|||
|
other. Each person's future is in some way linked to all.
|
|||
|
We thus reaffirm a commitment to the building of world
|
|||
|
community, at the same time recognizing that this commits us
|
|||
|
to some hard choices.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THIRTEENTH: This world community must renounce the resort
|
|||
|
to violence and force as a method of solving international
|
|||
|
disputes. We believe in the peaceful adjudication of
|
|||
|
differences by international courts and by the development
|
|||
|
of the arts of negotiation and compromise. War is obsolete.
|
|||
|
So is the use of nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons.
|
|||
|
It is a planetary imperative to reduce the level of military
|
|||
|
expenditures and turn these savings to peaceful and
|
|||
|
people-oriented uses.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FOURTEENTH: The world community must engage in cooperative
|
|||
|
planning concerning the use of rapidly depleting resources.
|
|||
|
The planet earth must be considered a single ecosystem.
|
|||
|
Ecological damage, resource depletion, and excessive
|
|||
|
population growth must be checked by international concord.
|
|||
|
The cultivation and conservation of nature is a moral value;
|
|||
|
we should perceive ourselves as integral to the sources of
|
|||
|
our being in nature. We must free our world from needless
|
|||
|
pollution and waste, responsibly guarding and creating
|
|||
|
wealth, both natural and human. Exploitation of natural
|
|||
|
resources, uncurbed by social conscience, must end.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
FIFTEENTH: The problems of economic growth and development
|
|||
|
can no longer be resolved by one nation alone; they are
|
|||
|
worldwide in scope. It is the moral obligation of the
|
|||
|
developed nations to provide -- through an international
|
|||
|
authority that safeguards human rights -- massive technical,
|
|||
|
agricultural, medical, and economic assistance, including
|
|||
|
birth control techniques, to the developing portions of the
|
|||
|
globe. World poverty must cease. Hence extreme
|
|||
|
disproportions in wealth, income, and economic growth should
|
|||
|
be reduced on a worldwide basis.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SIXTEENTH: Technology is a vital key to human progress and
|
|||
|
development. We deplore any neo-romantic efforts to condemn
|
|||
|
indiscriminately all technology and science or to counsel
|
|||
|
retreat from its further extension and use for the good of
|
|||
|
humankind. We would resist any moves to censor basic
|
|||
|
scientific research on moral, political, or social grounds.
|
|||
|
Technology must, however, be carefully judged by the
|
|||
|
consequences of its use; harmful and destructive changes
|
|||
|
should be avoided. We are particularly disturbed when
|
|||
|
technology and bureaucracy control, manipulate, or modify
|
|||
|
human beings without their consent. Technological
|
|||
|
feasibility does not imply social or cultural desirability.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
SEVENTEENTH: We must expand communication and
|
|||
|
transportation across frontiers. Travel restrictions must
|
|||
|
cease. The world must be open to diverse political,
|
|||
|
ideological, and moral viewpoints and evolve a worldwide
|
|||
|
system of television and radio for information and
|
|||
|
education. We thus call for full international cooperation
|
|||
|
in culture, science, the arts, and technology across
|
|||
|
ideological borders. We must learn to live openly together
|
|||
|
or we shall perish together.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
-- Humanity As a Whole --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
IN CLOSING: The world cannot wait for a reconciliation of
|
|||
|
competing political or economic systems to solve its
|
|||
|
problems. These are the times for men and women of goodwill
|
|||
|
to further the building of a peaceful and prosperous world.
|
|||
|
We urge that parochial loyalties and inflexible moral and
|
|||
|
religious ideologies be transcended. We urge recognition of
|
|||
|
the common humanity of all people. We further urge the use
|
|||
|
of reason and compassion to produce the kind of world we
|
|||
|
want -- a world in which peace, prosperity, freedom, and
|
|||
|
happiness are widely shared. Let us not abandon that vision
|
|||
|
in despair or cowardice. We are responsible for what we are
|
|||
|
or will be. Let us work together for a humane world by
|
|||
|
means commensurate with humane ends. Destructive
|
|||
|
ideological differences among communism, capitalism,
|
|||
|
socialism, conservatism, liberalism, and radicalism should
|
|||
|
be overcome. Let us call for an end to terror and hatred.
|
|||
|
We will survive and prosper only in a world of shared humane
|
|||
|
values. We can initiate new directions for humankind;
|
|||
|
ancient rivalries can be superseded by broad-based
|
|||
|
cooperative efforts. The commitment to tolerance,
|
|||
|
understanding, and peaceful negotiation does not necessitate
|
|||
|
acquiescence to the status quo nor the damming up of dynamic
|
|||
|
and revolutionary forces. The true revolution is occurring
|
|||
|
and can continue in countless nonviolent adjustments. But
|
|||
|
this entails the willingness to step forward onto new and
|
|||
|
expanding plateaus. At the present juncture of history,
|
|||
|
commitment to all humankind is the highest commitment of
|
|||
|
which we are capable; it transcends the narrow allegiances
|
|||
|
of church, state, party, class, or race in moving toward a
|
|||
|
wider vision of human potentiality. What more daring a goal
|
|||
|
for humankind than for each person to become, in ideal as
|
|||
|
well as practice, a citizen of a world community. It is a
|
|||
|
classical vision; we can now give it new vitality.
|
|||
|
Humanism thus interpreted is a moral force that has time on
|
|||
|
its side. We believe that humankind has the potential,
|
|||
|
intelligence, goodwill, and cooperative skill to implement
|
|||
|
this commitment in the decades ahead.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
We, the undersigned, while not necessarily endorsing every
|
|||
|
detail of the above, pledge our general support to Humanist
|
|||
|
Manifesto II for the future of humankind. These
|
|||
|
affirmations are not a final credo or dogma but an
|
|||
|
expression of a living and growing faith. We invite others
|
|||
|
in all lands to join us in further developing and working
|
|||
|
for these goals.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
[EDITOR'S NOTE: Thousands of names have been added to the
|
|||
|
list of signatories which followed the original Humanist
|
|||
|
Manifesto II, published in the September/October 1973 issue
|
|||
|
of The Humanist magazine by the American Humanist
|
|||
|
Association. You may become a signer yourself by contacting
|
|||
|
the AHA at the address below.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(C) Copyright 1973 by the American Humanist
|
|||
|
Association
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So long as profit or gain is not your motive and you always
|
|||
|
include this copyright notice, please feel free to make
|
|||
|
limited copies of this material in electronic form. Local
|
|||
|
nonprofit Humanist organizations have additional permission
|
|||
|
to reprint this in print form. All other permission must be
|
|||
|
sought from the American Humanist Association.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AMERICAN HUMANIST ASSOCIATION
|
|||
|
PO BOX 1188 AMHERST NY 14226-7188
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Phone: (800) 743-6646
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
==========================================================
|
|||
|
|| END OF ISSUE ||
|
|||
|
==========================================================
|
|||
|
Once again: ISSN: 1201-0111 The Nullifidian Volume Two,
|
|||
|
Number 4: APR 1995.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
(*) There is no footnote, and certainly not an endnote.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
--
|
|||
|
Autumn wind: Where there are humans Greg Erwin, pres., Humanist
|
|||
|
gods, Buddha-- you'll find flies, Association of Ottawa
|
|||
|
lies, lies, lies and Buddhas. ai815@freenet.carleton.ca
|
|||
|
--Shiki --Issa godfree@magi.com
|