Arthur Jackson

The 10 Commandments or the 11 Ways of Wisdom: Take your pick

Arthur Jackson

August 4, 2013

Arthur Jackson
Arthur Jackson

 

Arthur Jackson, author of “How to Live the Good Life: A User’s Guide for Modern Humans,” and “The Humanist Chapter of the Future and the Future of Humanism,” has been a long-time participant in all levels of Humanism – local, national, and international. He will provide our Sunday Forum, “The 10 Commandments or the 11 Ways of Wisdom: Take your pick.

 

 

ELEVEN WAYS OF WISDOM – Arthur Jackson
1. Recognize that Human Beings Are the Ultimate Reference System.
2. Endeavor to maintain and develop the human species. Support efforts to develop Enlightened Communities. (Communities promoting authentic happiness for all its citizens.)
3. Seek to understand. Pursue Wisdom.
4. Recognize that all knowledge rests on faith/beliefs and must always be open to questioning.
5. Strive to make the best choices possible.
6. Know and struggle to improve yourself; work to be physically and psychologically healthy.
7. Develop and adopt a perceptual framework in which pain does not prevent the achievement of authentic happiness.
8. Help and be helped by other people.
9. Work to increase knowledge and all creative and artistic endeavors. Adopt an inspiring life goal.
10. Support efforts to ensure that every child is provided a loving, nurturing environment and all the things necessary to achieve authentic happiness.
11. Work to achieve authentic happiness. Make of your life a spiritual quest.**

**Spiritual Quest (The quest for wisdom): For Science of Ethics this involves accepting oneself as a natural being evolved in a natural world with the power of symbolic language which provides the ability to look beyond our current knowledge and experience and draw inspiration from that vision. This is a naturalistic definition of the spiritual, and the transcendent, but identifies with the eternal, with the ultimate, with the infinite, with truth/Truth.

ELEVEN WAYS OF WISDOM – Roy Speckhardt, Executive Director of AHA:
1. Recognize the Human Standard.
2. Improve society.
3. Pursue Wisdom.
4. Question and confirm knowledge.
5. Make choices deliberately.
6. Improve yourself.
7. Overcome suffering.
8. Facilitate people helping people.
9. Set aside space for creativity to thrive.
10. Ensure every child has a chance.
11. Pursue authentic happiness.

Arthur writes that this program is meant to examine the Ten Commandments in a way most Humanists and other freethinker rarely do, and present a science-based alternative for providing moral guidance in today’s world.  You can view the uncensored Ten Commandments here. 

 

Humanist Community Forum (2013-08-04): The 10 Commandments or the 11 Ways of Wisdom: Take Your Pick (Arthur M. Jackson) from Humanist Community-SiliconValley on Vimeo.

 

As intended, Arthur’s presentation initiated much discussion and research for alternative “Commandments.”  Below are a few examples.

Bertrand Russell’s “Commandments” in 1951:

1: Do not feel absolutely certain of anything.
2: Do not think it worthwhile to produce belief by concealing evidence, for the evidence is sure to come to light.
3: Never try to discourage thinking, for you are sure to succeed.
4: When you meet with opposition, even if it should be from your husband or your children, endeavor to overcome it by argument and not by authority, for a victory dependent upon authority is unreal and illusory.
5: Have no respect for the authority of others, for there are always contrary authorities to be found.
6: Do not use power to suppress opinions you think pernicious, for if you do the opinions will suppress you.
7: Do not fear to be eccentric in opinion, for every opinion now accepted was once eccentric.
8: Find more pleasure in intelligent dissent than in passive agreement, for, if you value intelligence as you should, the former implies a deeper agreement than the latter.
9: Be scrupulously truthful, even when truth is inconvenient, for it is more inconvenient when you try to conceal it.
10. Do not feel envious of the happiness of those who live in a fool’s paradise, for only a fool will think that it is happiness.

More information is available at this link:
http://www.openculture.com/2013/03/bertrand_russells_ten_commandments_for_living_in_a_healthy_democracy.html

 

Alain de Botton’s 10 virtues for atheists are:

1. Resilience. Keeping going even when things are looking dark.
2. Empathy. The capacity to connect imaginatively with the sufferings and unique experiences of another person.
3. Patience. We should grow calmer and more forgiving by getting more realistic about how things actually tend to go.
4. Sacrifice. We won’t ever manage to raise a family, love someone else or save the planet if we don’t keep up with the art of sacrifice.
5. Politeness. Politeness is very linked to tolerance, the capacity to live alongside people whom one will never agree with, but at the same time can’t avoid.
6. Humour. Like anger, humour springs from disappointment, but it’s disappointment optimally channelled.
7. Self-Awareness. To know oneself is to try not to blame others for one’s troubles and moods; to have a sense of what’s going on inside oneself, and what actually belongs to the world.
8. Forgiveness. It’s recognising that living with others isn’t possible without excusing errors.
9. Hope. Pessimism isn’t necessarily deep, nor optimism shallow.
10. Confidence. Confidence isn’t arrogance, it’s based on a constant awareness of how short life is and how little we ultimately lose from risking everything.

More information is available at this link:

http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/iv-drip/bring-back-the-goodness-alain-de-bottons-10-commandments-for-atheists-8480128.html

There are many other attempts to define “Commandments” for the non-religious.  Most of them are easily available on the internet.

 

 

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Defining Humanism

How Would You Define Humanism?

Sandy Smith

June 2, 2013

Sandy Smith
Sandy Smith

 

Join us as we discuss and compare several definitions of Humanism taken from Humanist Community and AHA publications.  The goal is to help you decide what is important to you about Humanism and give you some insight into what is important to others.

 Definitions of Humanism

  • Humanists value freedom, compassion, fairness, and knowledge derived from science and reason. We seek ethical and personally-fulfilling lives that aspire to the greater good of humanity.   HCSV web site
  • Humanism is a philosophy of life valuing freedom, compassion, fairness, and knowledge derived from science and reason. It affirms our ability and responsibility to lead ethical lives of personal fulfillment aspiring to the greater good of humanity.   HCSV web site.
  • Humanism is a progressive philosophy of life that, without theism and other supernatural beliefs, affirms our ability and responsibility to lead ethical lives of personal fulfillment that aspire to the greater good of humanity.   AHA web site
  • Humanists recognize that it is only when people feel free to think for themselves, using reason as their guide, that they are best capable of developing values that succeed in satisfying human needs and serving human interests.   ISAAC ASIMOV – scientist, author, and past president of the American Humanist Association.  From the AHA web site.
  • Humanism is a philosophy of joyous service for the greater good of all humanity, of application of new ideas of scientific progress for the benefit of all.   LINUS PAULING – scientist, Humanist of the Year in 1961, Nobel Prize in chemistry in 1954, Nobel Peace Prize in 1962.  From the AHA web site.  

 

Comments from Discussion

The discussion began in small groups; then we all reconvened to continue the discussion.  The following is a summary of points made during the large group discussion.

  • The definition of Humanism on the AHA’s Web site begins “Humanism is a progressive philosophy of life ….”  The word “progressive” should be replaced by “reality-based.”
  • The definition of Humanism should include some reference to community.
  • Some definitions refer to “the greater good of humanity” as a goal.  It is wrong to elevate humanity above all else, e.g., above the other life forms or the environment.
  • Some definitions refer to “science and reason.”  Those two words are equivalent to “reality.”
  • When working for the greater good of humanity, we need to think as one global human family, not as nationalists.
  • Humanists are free thinkers.
  • There was a difference of opinion about whether one could be both a theist and a Humanist.
  • The Humanist Community should have no political attachment.  Some visitors have stopped coming because we appear to be anti-Republican, which we are not.
  • A Humanist group should be accepting of all people and not turn others away.
  • The definition of Humanism boils down to “love.”

 

 

Luis Granados

Damned Good Company: Twenty Rebels Who Bucked the God Experts

Luis Granados

April 7, 2013

2013-04-07-Luis-Granados-350The author will provide a program on his book Damned Good Company; a collection of Profiles in Courage for humanists – a book to make humanists proud of themselves.

Damned Good Company is a book about people, not about God. People who have preached about God, taken money for sharing what they say they know about God, and ordered others about to enforce what they claim to be God’s will–and a small band of heroes who stood up to them.

In short, Damned Good Company is a Profiles in Courage for humanists.

Some of the twenty heroes of Damned Good Company are well-known: Erasmus, Voltaire, Thomas Paine, Clarence Darrow, Atatürk, Nehru, Stephen Bantu Biko. Others are not: people like Han Yü, banished from the 9th century Chinese court for questioning the worship of the Buddha’s finger, and Lucy Harris, who came within an inch of deflating Mormonism before it got off the ground.

Each hero is contrasted with a villain of his or her time and place: either a God expert like Martin Luther or Joseph Smith or a cynical politician like Mussolini, who never believed in God but exploited religion shamelessly to advance his political ambition.

The stories in Damned Good Company will inspire those today who want to stand up to the Christian Right, the Muslim fanatics, the oppressiveness of Catholic and Jewish orthodoxy, the rising Hindu Taliban, and everyone else who claims a God-given right to tell the rest of us what to do.

Damned Good Company is available from HumanistPress.com and all major online ebook retailers.

Humanist Community Forum (2013-04-07): Damned Good Company – Twenty Rebels Who Bucked the God Experts (Luis Granados) from Humanist Community-SiliconValley on Vimeo.

A New Foundation for Civilization: Humanism?

Arthur Jackson

February 17, 2013

Arthur Jackson
Arthur Jackson

 

Can humanism truly provide a foundation for a society? If not what would it take to do so? Arthur Jackson will lay out his best thinking on this topic.

Arthur is current President of HCSV and Secretary for Humanist Society, AHA (the body that certifies Humanist Celebrants, Ministers, and Chaplains. He Chaired the IHEU Working Party on Humanist Counseling (1968-78). He is also the author of  The Humanist Chapter of the Future and the Future of Humanism (1982, 1993) and  How to Live the Good Life: A User’s Guide for Modern Humans (2011). He worked as AHA’s Assistant Director (1965-69).

 

Humanist Community Forum (2013-02-17): A New Foundation for Civilization: Humanism? (Arthur Jackson) from Humanist Community-SiliconValley on Vimeo.