Humanism in United States Federal Prisons

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As of 2016, there are 2.3 million incarcerated people in the United States. There are approximately 329 million people in the United States, total. About 0.7% of the United States’ population is held in state or federal prison, or a local jail, which means that close to 1% of Americans are incarcerated. With so many […]

An Introduction to Humanist Naming Ceremonies

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What is a Naming Ceremony? A humanist naming ceremony typically welcomes a baby or young child into a family, but the ceremony can be held for children of all ages. There is typically less emphasis on the actual naming of a child, and more emphasis on the child’s role within the family. Naming ceremonies can […]

A Re-Commitment to Living Sustainably

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The past year and a half have radically shifted the ways in which so many of us view the world. It’s been a wild 15 months – from a pandemic and raging wildfires to the dozens of species that are now extinct due to human impact. New humanism is linked to environmental sustainability in so […]

Humanism In The News: Lower Divorce Rates in Humanist Marriages, Scotland Study Shows

News

Divorce rates are on the decline as external pressures to marry decrease. However, some marriage demographics have higher rates of divorce than others. Marriage and divorce data from Scotland in 2019 reveals that couples married in humanist ceremonies are four times less likely to get divorced.  Humanists UK used a freedom of information request to […]

We Used to Value Elders & Experience

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Somewhere along the way we started valuing youth While this might start off as a general and abmiguous complaint about “people not respecting their elders” I promise I won’t stay here too long. I guess I am old now, but when I was young, you didn’t mess with teachers or adults or you’d find out […]

Why Must Humanism Remain Secular?

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There are many areas in which secularist ideas are well developed, but the challenging of a public view of religion in general and Christianity as a benign force is not. Unless we explain why we oppose religion, the general public, writers and broadcasters will remain apathetic to, confused, and unconvinced by secularism and humanism. Atheists and agnostics spend […]

The Human Cost of Religion: Buildings

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During the reporting of earthquakes in Turkey and Iran, mosques, with their delicate decoration withstood the earthquake, modern buildings around them crumbled. At about the same time it was reported that in Italy buildings including blocks of flats, put up in the last thirty years were found to be in imminent danger of collapse, as […]

Humanism and Cannabis Legalization

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The current emergence of a rational appraisal of Cannabis is long overdue. Several aspects of the relationship between physical and mental health and religion, have been raised recently; the relative merits of conventional psychiatric treatment, versus counselling, ‘alternative therapies’, ‘spiritual’ healing and prayer; and whether the well are well, because of, or despite religious belief […]

Information Tech and the Humanist Movement

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Many older people seem suspicious of computers and the Internet, considering it only relevant to the young and economically active, games, travel information, buying tickets & trading on-line, not to mention pornography. It is as though the invention of the printing press had been dismissed as only useful to produce comics, tabloid papers, junk mail […]

The Gender Intersectionality of Nagging Wife Syndrome

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We wanted to add a new element to this site in the form of more editorialized musings on social roles today in light of our ongoing mission to explore how the tenets of New Humanism manifest themselves today. Specifically, I wanted to talk about something I refer to as “nagging wife syndrome” and why I […]

A New Report Reveals Surge in Scottish Humanism

News

A new report, commissioned by the Humanist Society of Scotland, reveals that a substantial majority of Scottish people do not hold religious or spiritual beliefs. This majority—around 59 percent—is a significant portion of the population. The research, performed by survey, polled over 1,000 Scottish residents about a range of issues relating to their religious affiliations […]

The Guardian Thinks Humanist Weddings are the Antidote to Boring Marriage Ceremonies—And They’re Right

News

Late last month, The Guardian published an article decrying the banality of the average civil ceremony. Dry, white, and traditional, the piece argues that these weddings symbolize intolerance; planning one of these ceremonies is about as special as filling in a tax return. The author writes, “When standing in front of 100 friends and family, being married […]

Humanism in the News: In August, the First Humanist Marriage in Northern Ireland

News

In June, the Belfast Court of Appeals ruled that humanist marriages must be legally recognized. Two months later, Northern Ireland saw its first humanist marriage.  Let’s start with what it means to have a humanist marriage. This wedding is a non-religious ceremony that is often deeply personal and conducted by a humanist celebrant. The ceremony […]

Humanists in the News: Toledo Secular Humanists Aspire to Create Community

News

Source: The Blade  Shawn Meagley and Douglas Berger have co-organized an organization called Secular Humanists of Western Lake Erie, or SHoWLE. Berger brings years of experience in leadership within the Humanist Community of Central Ohio. Though there are currently organized groups for atheists and skeptics in the area, the region has yet to see a secular humanist organization.     […]

Humanism in the News: Humanism as a Source of Values in 21st Century Wales

News

Source: WalesOnline June 21st marked World Humanism Day. In Wales, former Counsel General Mick Antoniw argued that the ideology is an important, even necessary source of values for Wales, which is becoming increasingly secular. In his essay, published by WalesOnline, he envisions Humanism as the ideology that will unite the country. According to Antoniw, the […]

When the Media Gets it Wrong: Misunderstanding Humanism

News

Every once in a while, I do a Google News search for the terms “Humanism” and “New Humanism.” I am almost always disappointed—not because humanists around the world are behaving poorly (we’re not, I promise), but because of the misuse of the word itself. Journalists and columnists use the term “Humanism” to describe the phenomenon […]

Humanists in the News: U.S. Navy Rejects Secular Humanist Chaplain’s Application

News

Jason Heap has been denied the opportunity to join the Chaplain Corps. Despite receiving a recommendation from the Navy Chaplain Appointment and Retention Eligibility Advisory Board, the Navy rejected the application amid strong pushback from congressional Republicans. In early March, the United States Navy received a letter written by Senator Roger Wicker (RMS) and 22 […]

The World Through a Humanist’s Eyes

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Because Humanism emphasizes the importance of human agency and critical thought, proponents of the outlook believe that humans must claim responsibility for ongoing global conflict, be it physical or political. Nothing is left to chance; everything that has happened—from political election results to the outcome of wars and battles—is the result of human action, not […]