Re: Humanism in 2006




Scott wrote:

> 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.

> So stand the theses of religious humanism.

Yes, there is a religious humanism, but that is not real humanism, it
is a compromise.

Some humanists think we need replacements for the old religion, so they
make it possible to do similar procedures as the church does, but
without the old religion.
You can have a humanist wedding, without religious ideas and symbols.
This is not mainstream humanism though.

Note that US-americans have their own version of concepts in the old
world.
They have their own kind of "football", their own kind of liberalism,
their own version of anarchism, their own kind of humanism, etc.. Many
ideas become different when formulated by strongly creationist and
isolationist people.

One could also say that the population in a country which wants to rule
the whole world has to be fooled, more fooled than any other people in
the world.
This means that a lot of stuff they teach US-americans in school is
twisted and different from the knowledge the rest of the world learns.
The words are defined differently and have different connotations.

For example the word communist is not a negative word to many people in
the world, but to americans it means something like fascist, criminal,
idiot, people who eat their own babies, etc..

> Now that is a mythology in the making. And to quote: "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" simply translates to: "WE have the Truth, the
> Moral Truth and it is our evangelical mission to bring this truth to and
> convert the rest of the world.

That is your translation.

What humanists have is critical thinking and science. We know there is
no "Truth" we can rely on. We have to think for ourselves, we have to
agree on laws we want to follow, we want to create a society which is
good for us.


--
Roger J.

.



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