Humanism: Difference between revisions
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'''Humanism''' is a group of [[ethics|ethical]] theories that place the human being at the center of our moral concern. It also refers to a literary and scholarly movement during the [[Renaissance]] led by scholars like [[Erasmus]]. | '''Humanism''' is a group of [[ethics|ethical]] theories that place the human being at the center of our moral concern. It also refers to a literary and scholarly movement during the [[Renaissance]] led by scholars like [[Erasmus]]. | ||
Humanists tend to believe that human beings can make progress through the application of human intellect without the need for religious authority, and many also believe that "man is the measure of all things",<ref>Protagoras, 5th century BCE; see also {{cite | Humanists tend to believe that human beings can make progress through the application of human intellect without the need for religious authority, and many also believe that "man is the measure of all things",<ref>Protagoras, 5th century BCE; see also {{cite book|last=Speake|first=Jennifer|date=2008|chapter=MAN is the measure of all things|title=A Dictionary of Proverbs|url=http://books.google.com/books?id=ogm0c8mYtQUC&pg=PT441|location=Oxford; New York|publisher=Oxford University Press|edition=Fifth|pages=441|isbn=978-0-19-953953-6|oclc=212857025}}</ref> although some people like the ethicist [[Peter Singer]] have questioned humanist attitudes to animals. Humanism is derived from both [[Unitarian Universalism]] and from the philosophies of the [[Enlightenment]]. | ||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Revision as of 22:47, 21 April 2014
Humanism is a group of ethical theories that place the human being at the center of our moral concern. It also refers to a literary and scholarly movement during the Renaissance led by scholars like Erasmus.
Humanists tend to believe that human beings can make progress through the application of human intellect without the need for religious authority, and many also believe that "man is the measure of all things",[1] although some people like the ethicist Peter Singer have questioned humanist attitudes to animals. Humanism is derived from both Unitarian Universalism and from the philosophies of the Enlightenment.
References
- ↑ Protagoras, 5th century BCE; see also Speake, Jennifer (2008). “MAN is the measure of all things”, A Dictionary of Proverbs, Fifth. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press, 441. ISBN 978-0-19-953953-6. OCLC 212857025.