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See the Humanist Manifesto I.I was wondering...given that a humanist looks more towards the human solutions rather than any sort of "divine solution", does that mean that most are not open to the idea of there being a divine, or is it just simply not worshipped or employed in any way?
I was wondering...given that a humanist looks more towards the human solutions rather than any sort of "divine solution", does that mean that most are not open to the idea of there being a divine, or is it just simply not worshipped or employed in any way?
I was wondering...given that a humanist looks more towards the human solutions rather than any sort of "divine solution", does that mean that most are not open to the idea of there being a divine, or is it just simply not worshipped or employed in any way?
I was wondering...given that a humanist looks more towards the human solutions rather than any sort of "divine solution", does that mean that most are not open to the idea of there being a divine, or is it just simply not worshipped or employed in any way?
I find it all so very confusing :/
I know Xians who are humanists, even though I don't think they'd describe themselves as such.In humanism, there is simply no room for the divine. If humanism were a picture, it would fill the frame.
Nearly half of those who signed the first Manifest were Unitarians.I know Xians who are humanists, ... Would they be Xian-lite?
Interesting. Would you like to elaborate? Are there any perceived weird or contradictory points in the idea of Humanism?