Progressive Secular Society
92 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris

Progressive Secular Society , livre ebook

-

Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement

Je m'inscris
Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus
92 pages
English

Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage

Obtenez un accès à la bibliothèque pour le consulter en ligne
En savoir plus

Description

A progressive secular society is one committed to the widening of scientific knowledge and humane feeling. It regards humanity as part of physical nature and opposes any appeal to supernatural agencies or explanations. In particular, human moral perspectives are human creations and the only basis for ethics. Secular values need re-affirming in the face of the resurgence of aggressive supernatural religious doctrines and practices. This book gives a set of 'secular thoughts for the day' - many only a page or two long - on topics as varied as Shakespeare and Comte, economics, science and social action.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 14 septembre 2016
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781845404970
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0324€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Progressive Secular Society
And Other Essays Relevant to Secularism
Tom Rubens
SOCIETAS
essays in political
& cultural criticism
imprint-academic.com




2016 digital version converted and published by
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
Copyright © Tom Rubens, 2008
The moral rights of the author have been asserted.
No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without permission, except for the quotation of brief passages in criticism and discussion.
Imprint Academic, PO Box 200, Exeter EX5 5YX, UK



Preface
i
While varying in subject-matter, this group of short essays does have a focus topic: mechanistic naturalism. The topic is established early in the text, first by the essay ‘A Provisional Ontology’ and then by the essays ‘Appraising Energy’ and ‘Plato, Shakespeare and Energy’. Supported by references, principally to the physicist Heisenberg, but also to the philosophers Spencer, Nietzsche and Santayana, I contend that energy can be regarded, at least provisionally, as the universe’s fundamental substance, i.e., as that which persists through all physical change in the cosmos. Hence my position becomes that of mechanistic energism.
I should add that, in my first book, Minority Achievement in an Evolutionary Perspective (1984), I argued for a matter/energy ontology. In my second, Spinozan Power in a Naturalistic Perspective (1996), I opted for a more general physicalist position, without pursuing foundational terminology. This latter position is now replaced by one that is specifically energist, though, to repeat, provisional only.
In postulating an energist ontology, I cannot help thinking of a most prescient statement made in the 1940s by the playwright Arthur Adamov. He said that - God being dead - we are on the threshold of an era of impersonal aspects of the absolute. [1] If one regards the ‘absolute’ as fundamental substance, in the way defined above, then energy can be seen as this absolute. Also, the energist argument can be viewed as the most scientifically cogent of those emerging from the era which Adamov said was beginning (at least for Western man) in the 1940s. It is of course true that ontologies devoid of the concept of a personal deity, indeed of any kind of deity, pre-date the era of which Adamov spoke; in fact, in the most advanced Western thought, such ontologies have been dominant since the late nineteenth century (see, for example, the above references to Spencer, Nietzsche and Santayana). However, Adamov’s point can be most profitably taken to be that ontology minus the notion of personal deity would become the norm in Western thought, the common currency of all thinking people in Western culture, as distinct from being adhered to only by the most advanced minds. It is generally true to say that, over the last half century, this has happened . Despite various kinds of religious revivalism in the West, on balance the position is that most thinking people derive their ontology from empirical science, or at least look to the latter as their ontological starting-point. Science leaves little space for theism, and what little there is is narrowing all the time.
ii
Finally, the essays were written over the period 2002 to the present. This explains why, in the essay ‘Reflections on the Resurgence of the Left’, I refer to events in 2002 and 2003 as if they were very recent or current. That they are, of course, no longer so is a fact the reader will, I trust, make due allowance for.
T.R., November, 2007


1 See Martin Esslin, The Theatre of the Absurd (1961), in Pelican Books edn, 1976, p. 93.



Progressive Secular Society
This text is reproduced by kind permission of the editor of the journal The Ethical Record.
A progressive secular society can be broadly defined as one committed to the widening of scientific knowledge and humane feeling. It is based largely on the following humanistic tenets - that man is a part of physical nature, from which he cannot extricate himself; that there is nothing supernatural, i.e. nothing which is not part or product of physical nature, and therefore nothing which science cannot in principle describe; accordingly, that no supernatural agencies (e.g., gods) exist to aid or support mankind; that humanity must therefore be self-sustaining, expecting help from no quarter of the universe (except possibly from areas in which other natural beings of equal or greater intelligence exist); finally, that man’s moral perspectives are entirely his own creations and, as such, are, as far as we know, the only available bases for ethical judgement.
In all these respects, secularism makes the human context almost completely self-referential (almost, because of the possibility that intelligent beings may exist beyond the planet). The emphasis on self-reference is a point of central importance in the ways secular society functions, and in the ways its members relate to each other. Secularists see society - all its relationships and activities - as ship on an ocean which perhaps contains no other vessels, certainly no others in sight; as a ship, then, which must ply its course alone if necessary, and, again if need be, look to no one but its crew for the prosecution of that task. At the same time, the crew are not only functionaries ; they - or at least a significant number of them - do more than man ropes and watch compass dials. Just as important as these activities are: their perception of the vastness of the sea that surrounds them; their appreciation of each other as comrades; and their enthusiasm for the songs sung along the decks and in the rigging, in all weathers.
The essential character of the secular social project, hinging as that does on both science and humaneness, is to promulgate the scientific attitude in the ontological sphere, and liberal-humanist attitudes in the spheres of ethics and the arts. As the secular mind-set increases in influence, individuals - especially those of highly constructive outlook - view each other as the only available source of support in the effort to achieve social goals and a specific quality of life. Similarly, they look to each other for general enlightenment, clarification , edification. Such expectations may not always be fulfilled, but they are seen as having no other channel for fulfilment. So, increasingly, the search for satisfaction takes a human route, and seeks some kind of human exchange - of thoughts, feelings, actions. More and more, seats are sought at the table of the human symposium , where the perspectives offered claim only human origin. This general tendency is, and has always been, foremost in scientific discourse ; but it becomes predominant in the humanities as well, with supernaturalistic terminology receding, especially in the discussion of moral and artistic genius.
Underpinning the whole process is a sense of the tremendous, and perhaps peerless, complexity of the human sphere. The secular humanist views that sphere as the product of a gratuitous evolutionary explosion, one evidencing the staggering plasticity of physical nature. This explosion has shot out a rainbow-cascade of energies, capacities and aspirations, plus associated problems. The cascade is seen as richer than any superhuman realm postulated by supernaturalists , and as having the additional merit of being unquestionably real. Its richness, located as it is in such a small area of the universe, is regarded as meriting no less study than the stellar galaxies - indeed more, if nothing in interstellar space contains phenomena of comparable complexity.
At the same time, different degrees of brightness within the cascade are acknowledged. While the full spectrum of human capacity is deemed superior in quality to the spectrum of any other animal species, there is also the observation that wide qualitative diversity exists within it: ranging from the sub-average to the absolutely outstanding . For the secularist, this observation carries no embarrassing implications: a naturalistic and evolutionary view of man fits seamlessly with the fact of natural inequality in ability, and with the requirement to adjust expectations to that fact. The secularist position is not burdened with compunctions against long-term - indeed, ultimate - appraisal of the individual, unlike those religious doctrines which hold that all human beings are the creation of a divine parent, and are therefore ultimately subject only to divine appraisal. Secularism openly and explicitly claims ultimate status for human judgements.
However, it insists that such judgements should be as broad-minded and finely-tuned as possible. Hence secular appraisal at its best is a long way from being rigidly conventional and orthodox. It is essentially more sympathetic to individual variety and complexity than any theistic (therefore deo-centric) doctrine could ever be. Being without a superhuman point of moral reference by which everything human is judged, it has a uniquely capacious sense of human variety, of what may constitute self-fulfilment and self-achievement, and of ways an individual may regard himself as a success or failure. The intricacy of this approach is such that certain conventional criteria of success - for example, economic and professional status - are accompanied by many others, and sometimes eclipsed by the latter.
The multiplicity of criteria, or at least of candidates for criteria-status , indicates the secularist’s fundamental orientation toward moral debate. Secularism, in the West, is successor to a religious culture that is largely in decline, and this will be its future role in any part of the world where religion is in the descendant. Given this role, it is acutely aware that the moral certainties of the religious mind can never leg

  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents