The Philosophy of HumanismIn this text Corliss Lamont explains humanism according to his personal experience. He also cites works opposing his humanistic viewpoint such as Tim LaHaye's The Battlefield for the Mind. |
Contents
The Humanist Tradition | 30 |
This Life Is All and Enough | 81 |
Humanisms Theory of the Universe | 116 |
Copyright | |
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able achievement action activity American Association authority beauty become believe body called cause century Christian Church civil complete conception concern constitutes continually course cultural death democracy desire determinism earth economic effect especially established ethical evil existence experience expression fact final force freedom function future give groups hand happiness human Humanist ideal ideas implies important individual intellectual John kind knowledge lead living man's mankind material matter means method mind moral Moral Majority naturalistic Nature objective organization original past philosophy physical political possible present principle problems Professor question reason relation religion religious result scientific sense significant social society spirit supernatural theory things thought throughout tion traditional true truth United universe values whole York