List of secularist organizations

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Conway Hall Humanist Centre, home of the South Place Ethical Society, the oldest freethought community in the world. (Established 1793)

Secularist organizations promote the view that moral standards should be based solely on concern for the good of humanity in the present life, without reference to supernatural concepts, such as God or an afterlife, any desire for doing good as a reward after death, or any fear of punishment for not believing after death. The term secularism, as coined and promulgated by George Jacob Holyoake, originally referred to such a view.[1] Secularism may also refer to the belief that government should be neutral on matters of religion, and that church and state should be separate. The term is here used in the first sense, though most organizations listed here also support secularism in the second sense.

Background

Secularists, and their organizations, identify themselves by a variety of terms, including agnostic, atheist, bright, freethinker, humanist, nontheist, naturalist, rationalist, or skeptic.[2][3] Despite the use of these various terms, the organizations listed here have secularist goals in common. Note that, while most of these organizations and their members consider themselves irreligious, there are certain exceptions (Ethical Culture, for example).

In some jurisdictions, a provincial or national humanist society may confer upon Humanist officiants the ability to conduct memorial services, child naming ceremonies or officiate marriage tasks which would be carried out by clergy in most organised religions.[4][5][6]

List

International

Australia

Belgium

Brazil

Canada

Germany

Iceland

India

Indonesia

Ireland

Italy

Kuwait

Luxembourg

Netherlands

New Zealand

Northern Ireland

Norway

Philippines

Scotland

Singapore

Sweden

United Kingdom

United States

American Atheist bench and "Ten Commandments" display (Bradford County, Florida).

See also

Notes and references

  1. "Secularism". Oxford English Dictionary, Second Edition. Oxford University Press, 1989.
  2. The Secular Coalition for America, which has been identified by Brights.net as representing the interests of "secularist organizations", describes its constituency as "nontheistic Americans", including those who go by the labels "atheist, humanist, freethinker, agnostic, skeptic, bright, ignostic, materialist, and naturalist, among others." Who does the Secular Coalition for America represent? at the Secular Coalition for America website (Accessed 5 April 2008)
  3. Some less common secularist labels include: apatheist, godless (in the non-pejorative, literal sense), ignostic, infidel (or unbeliever), heathen, materialist, or realist.
  4. Humanist Canada: Humanist Weddings
  5. American Humanist Association: Humanists Stand Ready to Perform Same-Sex Marriage Ceremonies
  6. The Humanist Society Listing of Humanist Celebrants
  7. Atheist Alliance International website, 2008 (Accessed 9 April 2008)
  8. The Movement, The Brights' Network, 2008 (Accessed 9 April 2008)
  9. Presentation, European Humanist Federation website, 2006 (Accessed 10 April 2008)
  10. Laïque (French): "secular"
  11. About IHEU, IHEU website (Accessed 5 April 2008)
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Les non-religieux veulent aussi être consultés". L'essentiel (in French) (Edita SA). 18 January 2015. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
  13. The Norwegian Humanist Association, Human-Etisk Forbund website (English version), 2011 (Accessed 5 February 2011)
  14. Membership, Human-Etisk Forbund website (English version), 2004 (Accessed 9 April 2008)
  15. South Place Ethical Society website (Accessed 5 April 2008)
  16. Leicester Secular Society website (Accessed 5 April 2008)

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.