June suns, you cannot store them To warm the winter’s cold, The lad that hopes for heaven Shall fill his […]
…for a long time, like the philosophers of old, I was trying to find indisputable foundations. How long it took […]
…that perfect Tranquility of Life, which is no where to be found, but in retreat, a faithful Friend and a […]
…for the Promotion and Advancement of Science, Literature and Art Trust deed of the Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institute […]
We are (of all the synonyms I most prefer to ‘humanist’) freethinkers. We are deprived of nothing. We have lost […]
Charles Albert Watts was a lifelong promoter of rationalism, and the founder in 1885 of Watts’s Literary Guide, still published […]
… in broad terms, with our lecturers we attempt to define our intellectual standpoint; with our music we try to […]
I have adhered to such of the older traditions as I find adequate for my most lawless and revolutionary passions […]
I for one don’t believe in looking regretfully back into the past or forward with illusive hopes into the future, […]
…the only universal truths which exist are the fundamental laws of the mind. Philosophy, then, which is the science of […]
I was educated among the Saints; and I now live, thank God, among Sinners. David Williams, Essays on Public Worship […]
Derek Lennard was a longtime member and former chair of LGBT Humanists—then known as the Gay and Lesbian Humanist Group […]
I see this kind of love – the empathy that should be common to all living creatures – rather than […]
I lost religion in a breath; Heaven fled from me on the wings of Reason… Doris Lessing, Under My Skin: […]
Isn’t it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the […]
Humanism could (better) be honoured by reciting a list of the things one has enjoyed or found interesting, of the […]
The woman artist appears quickly to have grasped the fact that she cannot maintain an isolated and merely selfish point […]
Because no one will believe without a splash from a fontTheir baby will howl in eternal cold, or fire,And no […]
Eliza Flower was a composer, a radical, and a significant influence on William Johnson Fox and the progressive values of […]
Her beautiful life, her truth, her unwearied charities, proceeded from her own heart. They were not inspired by any thought […]
Emily Josephine Troup was a composer, poet, and editor, who played a leading role in the musical life of South […]
… a man who thinks himself bound to all offices of Humanity. Ephraim Chambers, self-composed epitaph Ephraim Chambers was an […]
Ernestine Mills, an enamelist, and her husband Dr. Herbert Henry Mills were both active members of the Ethical movement, and […]
I wish to live because life has within it that which is good, that which is beautiful, and that which […]
A cheerful and reverent Agnostic, whose whole life was one of unselfishness and devotion to lofty aims, who was tolerant […]
I have never believed in any formal religion, but I have experienced an emotion that seemed to me religious. In […]
As well as being one of the most distinguished musicians of his time, he was, like Sir Hubert Parry before […]
It is with a feeling of considerable deprecating delicacy that I venture to write of this woman, whom I so […]
‘Separate Development? Out of the closet, into the ghetto’ was a talk given by writer and activist Maureen Duffy on […]
Humanism is a philosophy of life based on a concern for humanity rather than a belief in god. Humanists believe […]
I suggest that the assembly we really want is an act of celebration, rather than worship. There is value in […]
What do we live for, if it is not to make life less difficult for each other? George Eliot, Middlemarch […]
I don’t understand people panicking about death. It’s inevitable. I’m an atheist; you’d think it would make it worse, but […]
You can always appeal to common decency, which the vast majority of people believe in without the need to tie […]
Harford Montgomery Hyde was a Belfast-born barrister, politician, author, and humanist, who championed humane legal reforms and progressive social attitudes. […]
Good writing excites me, and makes life worth living. Harold Pinter Harold Pinter was one of the 20th century’s most […]
What an emancipation it is, — to have escaped from the little enclosure of dogma, and to stand, — far […]
Humanism is less concerned with what to believe than with how to live. The meaning it gives to life lies […]
The Humanist Broadcasting Council was established in 1959, in consultation with the BBC, to advocate for the inclusion of humanist […]
The standing stones represent the letter punches which he cut to make his type, and the word virgil was Baskerville’s […]
We must grow out of the crude and unreal ideas of immortality and content ourselves with the only kind of […]
The notion that a man shall judge for himself what he is told, sifting the evidence and weighing the conclusions, […]
If the concept of God has any validity or any use, it can only be to make us larger, freer, […]
The difference and variety of our human family more and more seems to me to be a wise provision that […]
About the moral problem there is nothing mysterious; it is simply the old, old question of how best to live […]
Jennie Lee (also known as Baroness Lee of Asheridge) was a Scottish politician and journalist, known for her upfront orating […]
Humanism is a way to live, to give meaning to life and to find an understanding of our place in […]
We can’t help the universe, but at least we can do something to help ourselves. Can’t we? John Boyd, Across […]
John Curry was an English figure skater celebrated for revolutionising the sport by combining athleticism with balletic artistry. Openly gay […]
I think I was born a humanist. John D. Stewart, The Honest Ulsterman, May 1968 John D. Stewart was a […]
…the only efficient, the only decent prayer, is Action. John Galsworthy, ‘Philosophy of Life’ in Glimpses and Reflections (1937) Best […]
I fear their creed as we have always fearedthe lifted hand against unfettered thought. John Hewitt, ‘The Glens’ in Collected […]
My chosen ground Inscription on the John Hewitt Cairn John Harold Hewitt (1907-1987) was the most significant Ulster poet to […]
Words ought to be a little wild, for they are the assault of thoughts upon the unthinking. J.M. Keynes in […]
It is not to the point to say that the views of Lucretius and Bruno, of Darwin and Spencer, may […]
Purity of life, sincerity of action, obedience to law, love of our fellow creatures, all those qualities which ennoble life […]
Now art, certainly literary art, is ‘existential’ and has to be so. It is, if nothing else, about the real […]
Not to be confused with Kelmscott Manor, Kelmscott House was the London home of designer and socialist William Morris from […]
Kelmscott Manor was the country home of the writer, designer, and socialist William Morris from 1871 until his death in […]
For earth is not as though thou ne’er hadst been. Constance Naden, ‘The Pantheist’s Song of Immortality’ (1881) Birmingham’s Key […]
I believe in the supreme virtue of exploring. I believe in finding out. Even if I don’t succeed, I still […]
Harriet Martineau described her escape to atheism like this: “I lingered long on the stages of speculation and taste, but […]
But however little it conforms or tenders allegiance, no life worth having can be isolated from the lives of others. […]
Order is our Basis; Improvement our Aim; and Friendship our Principle. Annual Report of the Neighbourhood Guild, 1895 Leighton Hall […]
Lift the heart to high endeavour! Fire the thought and nerve the will! Though the bonds be hard to sever, […]
It is essential to get it recognised that good and graceful living is sufficient in itself; further, that this is […]
It has been suggested that matter is capable of destruction, that every atom is destined to be dissolved away in […]
We hold that only by making happiness for those around us, and by endeavoring, individually, to make the world a […]
Titus Lucretius Carus was a Roman poet contemporary of Julius Caesar. Little is known of him apart from his name […]
Ludovic Kennedy was a writer, journalist, and broadcaster, known for his investigations into miscarriages of justice. A human rights campaigner, he […]
Object: to provide an ‘open forum’ for the fearless consideration of modern problems relating to ethics, sociology, education, political theory, […]
They weren’t just trying to sell something to parents, they were helping them to understand how to play with and […]
And how can woman be expected to co-operate unless she knows why she ought to be virtuous? Unless freedom strengthens […]
Hath man no second life? Pitch this one high! Sits there no judge in Heaven our sin to see? More […]
Max Gate is the former home of Thomas Hardy in Dorchester, Dorset. Hardy designed and lived in Max Gate from 1885 until […]
A wide-ranging Humanism will always seek to extend to more and more people, through education and opportunity, the enrichment of […]
Belief in the power of man to choose his direction of change: this is the creed of the future, and […]
The National Portrait Gallery is an art gallery primarily located in London but with various satellite outstations located elsewhere in […]
[Ouida’s] exaggerated enthusiasms made readers smile, but they also made them think. It would be difficult to overstate the effect […]
Percy Bysshe Shelley was a major poet of the Romantic period, and remains one of England’s best loved and most […]
Humanists UK began as the Union of Ethical Societies in 1896, becoming the Ethical Union in 1920, the British Humanist […]
The Rationalist Press Association (now the Rationalist Association) had its origins in the London print works of Charles Albert Watts, […]
As well as being home to Conway Hall and its humanist library, Red Lion Square contains statues of two prominent […]
But this much is certain, that, taking the world as we find it, sympathy, plus a modicum of common sense […]
Man for man in larger sense does what heaven fails to do. Sara A. Underwood, quoted by Rufus K. Noyes […]
Sarah Flower Adams was a writer, radical, and major influence on the religious thinking of William Johnson Fox at South […]
I hold that a writer should not in any circumstances or for any cause surrender his duty to criticise and […]
Against the militarist totalitarian state, I have striven. For the freedom of the human spirit to develop under the kindly […]
There is no hope but us. There is no mercy but us. There is no justice. There is just us… […]
The British Museum is a museum of human history and culture in London. Its collections include objects of humanist heritage […]
The gist of heresy is free personal choice in act, and specially in thought – the rejection of traditional faiths […]
He was the people’s First Minister, and this is a people’s ceremony. He wouldn’t want heavy mourning. This is a […]
The Open University was founded in 1969 with the ambition of providing access to higher education for people who had […]
The Progressive League was an organisation dedicated to the advancement of scientific humanism, founded by author H.G. Wells and philosopher […]
Living in a house beautifully situated on the outskirts of Coventry, they used to spend their lives in philosophical speculations, […]
Thomas Hardy was an English novelist and poet, renowned for his apparently bleak outlook, but finely tuned to life and […]
Its main concern is with peace and security and with human welfare, in so far as they can be subserved […]
I cling to my tiny philosophy: to hug the present moment. Virginia Woolf, diary entry, 31 January 1940 Virginia Woolf […]
I remain an agnostic, and the practical outcome of agnosticism is that you act as though God did not exist. […]
William Johnson Fox was an orator, writer, politician, and first minister of South Place Chapel (now Conway Hall) from 1824 […]
Fellowship is heaven, and lack of fellowship is hell. William Morris, A Dream of John Ball (1888) Painter, textile designer, artist, […]
The attempt to create communities where men and women alike share the full stature of humanity is an attempt to […]