Dictionary Definition
secularism n : a doctrine that rejects religion
and religious considerations
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
secularism (uncountable)- A position that religious belief should not influence public and governmental decisions
- The related political belief in the separation of church and state
Related terms
Translations
A position that religious belief should not
influence public and governmental decisions
The related political belief in the separation
of church and state
- German: Säkularismus
Extensive Definition
Secularism is generally the assertion that
certain practices or institutions should exist separately from
religion or religious
belief. Alternatively, it is a principle of promoting secular ideas or values in
either public or private settings over religious ways of
thought.
In one sense, secularism may assert the right to
be free from religious rule and teachings, and freedom from the
government imposition of religion upon the people, within a state
that is neutral on matters of belief, and gives no state privileges
or subsidies to religions. (See also
Separation of church and state and Laïcité.)
In another sense, it refers to a belief that human activities and
decisions, especially political ones, should be
based on evidence and fact rather than religious influence. (See
also public
reason.)
The purposes and arguments in support of
secularism vary widely. In European laicism, it has been argued that
secularism is a movement toward modernization, and away
from traditional religious values. This type of secularism, on a
social or philosophical level, has often occurred while maintaining
an official state church
or other state support of religion. In the United
States, some argue that state secularism has served to a
greater extent to protect religion from governmental interference,
while secularism on a social level is less prevalent. Within
countries as well, differing political movements support secularism
for varying reasons.
Definition
The term "secularism" was first used by the British writer George Holyoake in 1846. Although the term was new, the general notions of freethought on which it was based had existed throughout history. In particular, early secular ideas involving the separation of philosophy and religion can be traced back to Ibn Rushd (Averroes) and the Averroism school of philosophy. Holyoake invented the term "secularism" to describe his views of promoting a social order separate from religion, without actively dismissing or criticizing religious belief. An agnostic himself, Holyoake argued that "Secularism is not an argument against Christianity, it is one independent of it. It does not question the pretensions of Christianity; it advances others. Secularism does not say there is no light or guidance elsewhere, but maintains that there is light and guidance in secular truth, whose conditions and sanctions exist independently, and act forever. Secular knowledge is manifestly that kind of knowledge which is founded in this life, which relates to the conduct of this life, conduces to the welfare of this life, and is capable of being tested by the experience of this life."Barry Kosmin of the Institute for the Study of
Secularism in Society and Culture breaks modern secularism into two
types: hard and soft secularism. According to Kosmin, "the hard
secularist considers religious propositions to be epistemologically
illegitimate, warranted by neither religion nor experience."
However, in the view of soft secularism, "the attainment of
absolute truth was impossible and therefore skepticism and
tolerance should be the principle and overriding values in the
discussion of science and religion."
State secularism
see also Secular state In political terms, secularism is a movement towards the separation of religion and government (often termed the separation of church and state). This can refer to reducing ties between a government and a state religion, replacing laws based on scripture (such as the Ten Commandments and Sharia law) with civil laws, and eliminating discrimination on the basis of religion. This is said to add to democracy by protecting the rights of religious minorities.Secularism is often associated with the Age of
Enlightenment in Europe, and plays a major role in Western
society. The principles, but not necessarily practices, of
Separation of church and state in the United States and
Laïcité
in France
draw heavily on secularism. As in the West, the idea of separation
of religion and government has also existed in India
since ancient times. An attempt was made (at least on paper and
laws) to build the modern Indian society on
these values and to a certain extent, this attempt has been
successful as well. Secular states also existed in the Islamic
world during the later Middle Ages.
Due in part to the belief in the separation of church and state,
secularists tend to prefer that politicians make decisions for
secular rather than religious reasons. In this respect, policy
decisions pertaining to topics like abortion, embryonic
stem cell research, same-sex
marriage, and sex
education are prominently focused upon by American secularist
organizations like, the Center
for Inquiry.
Most major religions accept the primacy of the
rules of secular, democratic society but may still seek to
influence political decisions or achieve specific privileges or
influence through church-state agreements such as a concordat. Many Christians
support a secular state, and may acknowledge that the idea has
support in biblical teachings, particularly Jesus' statement, "Then
give to Caesar what is Caesar's, and to God what is God's." (See
article).
However, some Christian
fundamentalists (notably in the United States) oppose
secularism, often claiming that there is a "radical secularism"
ideology being adopted in current days and see secularism as a
threat to "Christian rights" and national security. The most
significant forces of religious fundamentalism in the contemporary
world are Fundamentalist
Christianity and fundamentalist
Islam. At the same time, one significant stream of secularism
has come from religious minorities who see governmental and
political secularism as integral to preserving equal rights.
Some of the well-known constitutionally secular
states are India, France, the United
States, Turkey and South Korea,
although none of these nations have identical forms of
governance.
Secular society
In studies of religion, modern Western societies are generally recognized as secular. This is due to the near-complete freedom of religion (one may believe in one religion, many religions or none at all, with little legal or social sanction), as well as the general belief that religion does not ultimately dictate political decisions. Nevertheless, the moral views originating in religious traditions remain politically important in many of these countries, such as Canada, France, Turkey, United States and others (see Laïcité). In some, religious references are considered out-of-place in mainstream politics.Modern sociology, born of a crisis of
legitimation
resulting from challenges to traditional Western religious
authority, has since Durkheim
often been preoccupied with the problem of authority in secularized
societies and with secularization as a
sociological or historical process. Twentieth-century scholars
whose work has contributed to the understanding of these matters
include Max
Weber, Carl L.
Becker, Karl
Löwith, Hans
Blumenberg, M.H.
Abrams, Peter L.
Berger, and Paul
Bénichou, among others.
Secularism can also be the social ideology in
which religion and
supernatural
beliefs are not seen as the key to understanding the world and are
instead segregated from matters of governance and reasoning. In
this sense, secularism can be involved in the promotion of science, reason, and naturalistic
thinking.
Secularism can also mean the practice of working
to promote any of those three forms of secularism. As such, an
advocate of secularism in one sense may not be a secularist in any
other sense. Secularism does not necessarily equate to atheism; many secularists are
religious, while atheists often accept the influence of religion on
government or society. Secularism is an essential component of a
secular
humanist social and political ideology.
Some societies become increasingly secular as the
result of social processes, rather than through the actions of a
dedicated secular movement; this process is known as secularization.
Secular ethics
George
Holyoake's 1896 publication English Secularism defines
secularism as:
Secularism is a code of duty pertaining to this
life, founded on considerations purely human, and intended mainly
for those who find theology indefinite or inadequate, unreliable or
unbelievable. Its essential principles are three: (1) The
improvement of this life by material means. (2) That science is the
available Providence of man. (3) That it is good to do good.
Whether there be other good or not, the good of the present life is
good, and it is good to seek that good.
Holyoake held that secularism and secular
ethics should take no interest at all in religious questions
(as they were irrelevant), and was thus to be distinguished from
strong freethought
and atheism. In this he disagreed with Charles
Bradlaugh, and the disagreement split the secularist movement
between those who argued that anti-religious movements and activism
was not necessary or desirable and those who argued that it
was.
Arguments for and against secularism
Proponents of secularism have long argued that
the general rise of secularism in all the senses enumerated above,
and corresponding general decline of religion in secular
states, is the inevitable result of the Age of
Enlightenment, as people turn towards science and rationalism and away from
religion and superstition.
Opponents argue that secular government creates
more problems than it solves, and that a government with a
religious (or at least not a secular) ethos is better. Some
Christian opponents contend that a Christian state can give more
freedom of religion than a secular one. For evidence, they cite
Norway,
Iceland,
Finland and
Denmark,
all with constitutional links between church and state and yet also
recognized as more progressive and liberal than some countries
without such a link. For example, Iceland was among the first
countries to legalise abortion, and the Finnish government provides
funding for the construction of Mosques. Some cite the
counterexample of the Netherlands and, more recently, Sweden, it
being both a secular state and socio-politically progressive
although having disestablished
its state church in 2000.
Proponents of secularism also note that the
Scandinavian
countries are socially among the most secular in the world, with
particularly low percentages of individuals who hold religious
beliefs. Recently this argument has been debated publicly in Norway
where movements sought to disestablish the state's Lutheran
church.
Some modern commentators have criticized
secularism by conflating it with anti-religious, atheistic, or even satanic
belief systems. The word secularism itself is commonly used as a
pejorative by
religious
conservatives in the United
States. Pope
Benedict XVI has declared ongoing secularization to be a
fundamental problem of modern society, and has made it the
goal of his papacy to counteract secularism and moral
relativism. Though the goal of a secularist state is to be
religiously neutral, some argue that it is repressive of some
aspects of religion. Ostensibly, it is equally repressive toward
all religions in order to equally protect all from interference by
others.
Some political philosophies, such as Marxism, generally
hold that any religious influence in a state or society is
negative. In nations that have officially embraced such beliefs,
such as the former Eastern
European Communist
Bloc countries, the religious institution was made subject to
the secular state, in the public interest. Freedom to worship was
subject to licensure and other restrictions, and the doctrine of
the church was monitored to assure conformity to secular law, or
even the official public philosophy. In the Western
democracies, it is
generally agreed that these policies contravened full freedom of
religion.
Some secularists believe that the state should be
kept entirely separate from religion, and that religious
institutions should be entirely free from governmental
interference. Churches that exercise their authority completely apart
from government endorsement, whose foundations are not in the
state, are conventionally called "Free"
churches.
Some secularists would allow the state to
encourage religion (such as by providing exemptions from taxation,
or providing funds for education and charities, including those
that are "faith based"), but insist the state should not establish
one religion as the state
religion, require religious observance, or legislate dogma. Classical
liberals would assert that the state cannot rightfully 'exempt'
a religious organization from taxation since it has no
authority to tax or regulate it in the first place. This reflects
the view that temporal authority and spiritual authority operate in
complimentary spheres and where they overlap such as in moral values
or property
rights, neither should take authority over the other but should
offer a framework in which society can work these issues out
without subjugating a religion to the state or vice versa.
Secularist organizations
Groups such as the National Secular Society (United Kingdom) and Americans United campaign for secularism and are often supported by Humanists. In 2005, the National Secular Society held the inaugural "Secularist of the Year" awards ceremony. Its first winner was Maryam Namazie, of the Worker-Communist Party of Iran.Another secularist organization is the
Secular Coalition for America. While it is linked to many
secular humanistic organizations and many secular humanists support
it, as with the Secular Society, some non-humanists support
it.
Local organizations such as Freethought Association of
West Michigan work to raise the profile of secularism in their
communities and tend to include secularists, freethinkers,
atheists, agnostics, and humanists under their organizational
umbrella.
Student Organizations, such as the Toronto
Secular Alliance, try to popularize nontheism and secularism on
campus. The Secular
Student Alliance is an educational nonprofit that organizes and
aids such high school and college secular student groups.
In Turkey, most prominent and active secularist
organization is Atatürk's Thought
Association (ADD), which is credited for organizing
demonstrations in four largest cities in Turkey in 2007, where over
2 million people, mostly women, defended their concern in and
support of secularist principles introduced by Mustafa
Kemal Atatürk.
Leicester
Secular Society founded in 1851 is the world's oldest secular
society.
See also
- Agnosticism
- Anticlericalism
- Atheism
- Concordat
- Freethought
- Humanism
- Ignosticism
- Laïcité
- Naturalism
- Nontheism
- Pseudo-Secularism
- Rationalism
- Secular humanism
- Secularism in Iran
- Secularism in Turkey
- Separation of church and state
- Secularism (South Asia)
- Secularity
- Other related topics include:
References
Bibliography
The secular ethic
- Jacoby, Susan (2004). Freethinkers: a history of American secularism. New York: Metropolitan Books. ISBN 0-8050-7442-2
- Boyer, Pascal (2002). "Religion Explained: The Evolutionary Origins of Religious Thought" ISBN 0-465-00696-5
- Nash, David (1992). Secularism, Art and Freedom. London: Continuum International. ISBN 0-7185-1417-3 (paperback published by Continuum, 1994: ISBN 0-7185-2084-X)
- Royle, Edward (1974). Victorian Infidels: the origins of the British Secularist Movement, 1791-1866. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-0557-4 Online version
- Royle, Edward (1980). Radicals, Secularists and Republicans: popular freethought in Britain, 1866-1915. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-0783-6
- Taylor, Charles (2007). "A Secular Age". Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-02676-6
The secular society
See also the references list in the article on
secularization
- Berger, Peter L. (1967) The Sacred Canopy: Elements of a Sociological Theory of Religion. Garden City, NY: Doubleday.
- Chadwick, Owen (1975). The Secularization of the European mind in the nineteenth century. Cambridge University Press.
- Cox, Harvey (1996). The Secular City: Secularization and Urbanization in Theological Perspective. NY: Macmillan.
- Kosmin, Barry A. and Ariela Keysar (2007). Secularism and Secularity: Contemporary International Perspectives. Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture. ISBN-13: 978-0-9794816-0-4; ISBN-10: 0-9794816-0-0
- Martin, David (1978). A General Theory of Secularization. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-18960-2
- Martin, David (2005). On Secularization: Towards a Revised General Theory. Aldershot: Ashgate. ISBN 0-7546-5322-6
- McLeod, Hugh (2000). Secularisation in Western Europe, 1848-1914. Basingstoke: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-59748-6
- Wilson, Bryan (1969). Religion in Secular Society. London: Penguin.
- King, Mike (2007). Secularism. The HIdden Origins of Disbelief. Cambridge: James Clarke & Co. ISBN 9780227172452
The secular state
- Adıvar, Halide Edip (1928). "The Turkish Ordeal". The Century Club. ISBN 0-830-50057-X
- Cinar, Alev (2006). "Modernity, Islam, and Secularism in Turkey: Bodies, Places, and Time". University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-816-64411-X
- Juergensmeyer, Mark (1994). The New cold war?: religious nationalism confronts the secular state. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-08651-1
External links
secularism in Arabic: علمانية
secularism in Danish: Sekularisme
secularism in German: Säkularismus
secularism in Spanish: Secularismo
secularism in Persian: سکولاریسم
secularism in French: Laïcité
secularism in Croatian: Sekularizam
secularism in Indonesian: Sekularisme
secularism in Italian: Secolarismo
secularism in Hebrew: חילוניים
secularism in Georgian: სეკულარიზმი
secularism in Hungarian: Szekularizáció
secularism in Malayalam: മതേതരത്വം
secularism in Malay (macrolanguage):
Sekularisme
secularism in Dutch: Secularisme
secularism in Japanese: 政教分離原則
secularism in Norwegian: Sekularisme
secularism in Norwegian Nynorsk:
Sekularisme
secularism in Uzbek: Sekularizm
secularism in Polish: Sekularyzm
secularism in Portuguese: Secularismo
secularism in Romanian: Secularism
secularism in Finnish: Sekularismi
secularism in Swedish: Sekularism
secularism in Tamil: சமய சார்பின்மை
secularism in Turkish: Sekülerizm
secularism in Yiddish: סעקולאריזם
secularism in Chinese: 世俗主义
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Buddhology, Mariolatry, Mariology, Marxism, Mercersburg theology,
animalism, apologetics, atheism, atomism, behaviorism, canonics, commonsense realism,
crisis theology, dialectical materialism, dialogical theology,
disbelief, divinity, doctrinalism, doctrinism, dogmatics, down-to-earthness,
earthiness, earthliness, empiricism, epiphenomenalism,
eschatology,
existential theology, faithlessness, freedom
from illusion, hagiography, hagiology, hardheadedness, hierology, historical
materialism, hylomorphism, hylotheism, hylozoism, infidelity, lack of feelings,
logos Christology, logos theology, materialism,
matter-of-factness, mechanism, minimifidianism, natural
realism, natural theology, naturalism, neoorthodox
theology, neoorthodoxy, new realism,
nullifidianism,
patristic theology, phenomenological theology, physicalism, physicism, physicotheology,
positive philosophy, positivism,
practical-mindedness, practicality, practicalness, pragmaticism, pragmatism, rationalism, rationality, realism, reasonableness, religion, representative
realism, saneness,
scholastic theology, scientism, sensibleness,
sober-mindedness, soteriology, substantialism, systematics, temporality, theology, unbelief, unidealism, unromanticalness,
unsentimentality,
worldliness