Is Man the Measure?: An Evaluation of Contemporary Humanism Buy on Amazon
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Is Man the Measure?: An Evaluation of Contemporary Humanism

Publisher Wipf & Stock Pub
Category Religion
26.00 USD

In Stock.

Book Details
Author(s) Geisler, Norman
Publisher Wipf & Stock Pub
ISBN / ASIN 1597522996
ISBN-13 9781597522991
Availability In Stock.
Sales Rank #3,020,920
Category Religion
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
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Description
An academically respectable description and evaluation of secular humanism is available at last. The diversity within humanism receives full recognition in this book, as does the fact that not everything about humanism is bad from a Christian point of view. Indeed, the author continues, there are many emphases within humanism that are compatible with Christian beliefs, a thesis to which he devotes an entire chapter. Part 1 summarizes in turn eight prominent forms of humanism: Huxley's evolutionism, Skinner's behaviorism, Sartre's existentialism, Dewey's pragmatism, Marxism, Rand's egocentrism, Lamont's culturalism, and the coalitional form present in the humanist declaration and manifestoes. Emerging from these chapters are both the differences between humanists and the consensus that binds them together. It is this humanistic consensus, writes the author, that most radically conflicts with Christian beliefs and that is the number one problem in the United States today. After the chapter on the helpful emphases of secular humanism, part 2 details this movement's comparative inferiority, internal inconsistencies, religious inadequacies, and philosophical insufficiencies. The final chapter demonstrates that, while Christianity is consistent with the central principles of science, philosophy, epistemology, and ethics, humanism is not. There is no rational justification, the author concludes, for being a humanist.
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