Atheists & Agnostics
Related: About this forumGood Without God, by Greg M. Epstein
I try to set aside some time for reading every day, but don't always get there. So much to catch up on on the DVR!! Sometimes you just have to take the time and make the time, and it usually pays off.
Just finished reading "Good Without God - What A Billion Nonreligious People Do Believe" by Greg M. Epstein. Greg is the Humanist Chaplain at Harvard University. (the what?) It was published in 2009 but I just stumbled across it. And loved it. On being antagonistic to believers, Greg tones it down pretty far. I'm often torn between being nice (and quiet) or ripping the stupid ideas to shreds. Humanism could be like the middle ground.
The "Conclusion" to the book struck me (ow!). I thought I would share it here.
Conclusion
I write this as a call to action. The subject is Humanism, but convincing you to become a Humanist or to use that word to describe yourself isn't my goal. If you are not a Humanist, please go in peace. You have my respect. I ask you, for the sake of all humanity, for yours. And if you are a Humanist, and if you've been inspired by this book, please know that that in itself brings me no special joy if "Humanist" to you means merely "one who denies the existence of the gods." Humanists must be known for their actions.
We must act together for our own good and for the greater good. We are so fortunate to have evolved and been nurtured to possess reason, compassion, and creativity. It is what we do with those qualities that will determine everything. The fact that we live without God is, in a sense, not up to us. It's not really a choice. We see the world around us. We use our amazing human ability to think and believe with all our integrity that there is only this one natural world. But goodness is a choice. It is the most important choice we can ever make. And we have to make it again and again, throughout our lives and in every aspect of our lives. We have to be good for ourselves. We have to be good for the people we love. We have to be good for all the people around us, be they friend or foe. We are forced to be good without God. If we can accept that reality and act with courage, we can be very good indeed.
This is the beginning - only the beginning - of a movement that will change our world. I've been told that maybe in the future the world will be ready for Humanism. Maybe someday. But that's not an attitude we can afford to accept. As we can learn from a nearly two-thousand-year-old saying, it is not your responsibility to finish the work, but neither are you free to desist from it.
Let's go out and make a difference now.
Find the book here.
Yorktown
(2,884 posts)Teaching Darwinian evolution? Or secular Humanism? Analytical criticism of religions?
Don't expect the Christian and Muslim chamans to take it lying down.
mr blur
(7,753 posts)Evolution now being taught in English primary schools as part of the national curriculum for the first time
From this week, evolution is at last being taught as part of the national curriculum in primary schools across England.
We achieved this policy change in 2013 was the culmination of years of campaigning. Previously, evolution was only taught to pupils aged 14 and up.
BHA was also successful in prompting the Government to ban the teaching of creationism as science in state-funded English schools.