ABSTRACT

As we begin the third millennium there is cause for cautious optimism regarding the human prospect. Democratic revolutions and the doctrine of universal human rights have captured the imagination of large sectors of humanity, while major advances in science and technology continue to conquer disease and extend life, contributing to rising standards of living, affluence, and cultural freedom on a worldwide basis. Paradoxically, at the same time ancient authoritarian fundamentalist religions have grown in vitriolic intensity along with bizarre New Age, media-driven paranormal belief systems. Also surprising is the resurgence of primitive tribal and ethnic loyalties, unleashing wars of intolerance and bitterness. In Skepticism and Humanism, Paul Kurtz locates these threatening developments within a long-standing and largely unchallenged theological worldview. He proposes, as an alternative to religion, a new cultural paradigm rooted in scientific naturalism, rationalism, and a humanistic outlook.

An estimated 60 percent of scientists are atheists or agnostics. However, the skeptical world view has been given little currency even in advanced societies, because of a cultural prohibition against the criticism of religion. At the same time, science has become increasingly narrow and specialized so that few people can draw on its broader intellectual and cultural implications. Skepticism and Humanism attempts to meet this need. It defends skepticism as a method for developing reliable knowledge by using scientific inquiry and reason to test all claims to truth. It also defends scientific naturalism-an evolutionary view of nature, life, and the human species. Kurtz sees the dominant religious doctrines as drawn from an agricultural/nomadic past, and emphasizes the need for a new outlook applicable to the postindustrial information age. At the same time, he rejects postmodernism for abandoning science and embracing a form of nihilism.

There can be no doubt that as a new global civilization emerges, scientific naturalism, rationalism, and secular humanism have something significant to say about the meaning of life. Skepticism and Humanism shows how they can to foster democratic values and social prosperity. The book will be important for philosophers, scientists, and all those concerned with contemporary issues.

part One|114 pages

Skeptics of the World Unite!

chapter 1|10 pages

Antiscience Paradigms

chapter 2|8 pages

Skeptical Inquiry

chapter 3|20 pages

Skepticism and the Paranormal

chapter 4|6 pages

The Escape to Oblivion

chapter 5|8 pages

Fears of the Apocalypse

chapter 8|6 pages

In Defense of Scientific Medicine

chapter 9|6 pages

Can the Sciences be Unified?

chapter 11|16 pages

Why Do People Believe or Disbelieve?

part Two|44 pages

Beyond Religion

chapter 12|12 pages

First Things First

chapter 13|6 pages

Is Secular Humanism a Religion?

chapter 16|4 pages

Morality without God

chapter 17|6 pages

Humanism and the Idea of Freedom

part Three|52 pages

Neo-Humanist Politics

chapter 18|4 pages

The Need for a New Secular Coalition

chapter 19|4 pages

The McCarthyites of Virtue

chapter 20|4 pages

Where are the Secularists?

chapter 21|6 pages

Darwin Re-Crucified

chapter 23|6 pages

The Global Mediocracy

chapter 24|6 pages

The Population Time Bomb

chapter 26|4 pages

New Direction for Liberalism

part Four|50 pages

Humanism Writ Large

chapter 27|10 pages

The Evolution of Contemporary Humanism

chapter 28|6 pages

The Humanist Prospect

chapter 29|8 pages

The Infomedia Revolution

chapter 31|10 pages

Do the Arts Convey Knowledge?