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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 fulfill- ment 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, re- flecting the
worst features of orthodoxy and authoritarianism, especially when they
sacrifice individuals on the altar of Utopian promises. Purely economic
and political viewpoints, whether cap- italist 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 vulgar- ization, 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 person- ality. 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.
Exploi- tation 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.
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