Amsterdam Declaration
Encyclopedia : A : AM : AMS : Amsterdam Declaration
The Amsterdam Declaration 2002 is a statement of the fundamental principles of modern Humanism passed unanimously by the General Assembly of the International Humanist and Ethical Union (IHEU) at the 50th anniversary World Humanist Congress in 2002. According to the IHEU, the declaration "is the official statement of World Humanism."
It is officially supported by all member organisations of the IHEU including:
- American Humanist Association
- British Humanist Association
- Council of Australian Humanist Societies
- Council for Secular Humanism
- Gay and Lesbian Humanist Association
- Human-Etisk Forbundet, the Norwegian Humanist Association
- Humanist Association of Canada
- Humanist Association of Ireland
- Indian Humanist Union
This declaration makes exclusive use of capitalized Humanist and Humanism, which is consistent with IHEU's general practice and recommendations for promoting a unified Humanist identity. [#endnote_Webbs] To further promote Humanist identity, these words are also free of any adjectives, as recommended by prominent members of IHEU. [#endnote_Blackham] Such usage is not universal among IHEU member organizations, though most of them do observe these conventions.
Summary of Humanist principles
(see References for complete text)The fundamentals of modern Humanism are as follows:
- Humanism is ethical.
- Humanism is rational.
- Humanism supports democracy and human rights.
- Humanism insists that personal liberty must be combined with social responsibility.
- Humanism values artistic creativity and imagination and recognises the transforming power of art.
- Humanism is a lifestance aiming at the maximum possible fulfilment through the cultivation of ethical and creative living.
History
At the first World Humanist Congress in the Netherlands in 1952, the IHEU general assembly agreed a statement of the fundamental principles of modern Humanism - The Amsterdam Declaration.
At the 50th anniversary World Humanist Congress in 2002, the IHEU general assembly unanimously passed a resolution updating that declaration - "The Amsterdam Declaration 2002":
Following the Congress, this updated declaration was adopted unanimously by the IHEU General Assembly, and thus became the official defining statement of World Humanism.
See also
Major world religions - Humanists, rationalists, atheists and agnostics rank third in world (combined)References
[Amsterdam Declaration 2002] - the IHEU general assembly unanimous resolutionNotes
- ↑ "Capitalization
[ of Humanism] is not mandatory... It is recommended usage and the normal usage within IHEU" --Jeremy Webbs, IHEU webmaster, from a response to a Wikipedia editor inquiry, dated 2 March, 2006. - ↑ [Humanism is Eight Letters, No More] -- endorsed by Harold John Blackham, Levi Fragell, Corliss Lamont, Harry Stopes-Roe and Rob Tielman.
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
