Brandon716
Senior Member
Who on here would consider themselves secular humanists? Or atheists/non believers in a God or religion?
Count me in.
Count me in.
Secular humanist. I have yet to disagree with Dawkins on matters pertaining to faith. I think we all know how this poll is going to shake out.
Of course secular humanist is a dogma. It's wiki, but for what that's worth see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secular_humanism
i don't think so, though i may me wrong. unitarian universalism is a religion yet it is not dogmatic. i don't see how secular humanism could be a dogma. a dogma or doctrine is usually authoritarian and not open to criticism, negotiation or debate.
Winston Churchill was brought up in the Church of England, but was never devout. He once commented that he had made "so many deposits in the bank of Religion" as a youth, that he had been "confidently withdrawing from it ever since, never bothering to check the balance--there might indeed be an overdraft." In a short story written in 1947, Churchill referred to himself as "Episcopalian" (the North American version of the Anglican Church), which is an even more curious reference. Churchill's religion could best be described as an "optimistic agnostic." He wrote once that he was "not a pillar of the Church but more of a flying buttress--I support it from the outside."
I airing towards being an agnostic or atheist, but I'm studying World Religions at university just to be safe. You never know, I might find something Christianity wasn't offering !
Well, for starters demanding no prayer in schools, using happy holidays instead of Christmas, etc... are certainly systems of thought.i don't think so, though i may me wrong. unitarian universalism is a religion yet it is not dogmatic. i don't see how secular humanism could be a dogma. a dogma or doctrine is usually authoritarian and not open to criticism, negotiation or debate.
Well, for starters demanding no prayer in schools, using happy holidays instead of Christmas, etc... are certainly systems of thought.