By Steve Ratcliff Steve has been researching humanists from LGBT history, focusing on digitised materials from the archives of LGBT […]
Alice Woods was an educationist and headteacher; a member of the Hampstead Ethical Institute, and a proponent of moral education. […]
Antony Flew was a British philosopher and was, for much of his life, a renowned atheist and eloquent proponent of […]
It is in fact a strength, not a weakness, of a secular morality that it must stand upon its own […]
…for the Promotion and Advancement of Science, Literature and Art Trust deed of the Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institute […]
Telegraph House stood on the West Sussex Downs, very near to the highest point called Beacon Hill… It stood out […]
This Society has for its object the promotion of right conduct on a purely natural and human basis and the […]
The good life is one inspired by love and guided by knowledge. Neither love without knowledge, nor knowledge without love […]
Bessie Mabbs was a teacher, school principal, and active member of the Union of Ethical Societies (now Humanists UK), chairing […]
William Pirrie Barbour was a classicist, codebreaker, teacher, and activist. A rationalist and humanist, Barbour championed integrated education in his […]
To summarise why I have become a rationalist is a difficult task for one not educated in formal writing, but […]
Bishopsgate Institute was built ‘for the benefit of the public’ in 1894, intended to provide opportunities for education and recreation […]
In the absence of a better—the palladium of what liberty we have… the birthplace of mind, and the focus of […]
The British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS) began as the Birmingham Pregnancy Advisory Service, created to provide access to safe, legal, […]
If he had ever worshipped at any shrine, it would have been one illumined with the flame of pure intellect. […]
The Cambridge Ethical Society was established in 1888, inspired by the London Ethical Society (formed two years earlier). It aimed […]
No creative thinker has so governed… my mind as the French genius who framed the maxim – “Love for principle, […]
The writer, TV and radio personality and social campaigner, Claire Rayner, best known for her agony aunt columns, spent most […]
I for one don’t believe in looking regretfully back into the past or forward with illusive hopes into the future, […]
Conway Hall has effected a transformation. From the day of its opening the life of the Society has been full […]
I was educated among the Saints; and I now live, thank God, among Sinners. David Williams, Essays on Public Worship […]
I see this kind of love – the empathy that should be common to all living creatures – rather than […]
Not Religion as a Duty, but Duty as a Religion. Felix Adler(A motto of the East London Ethical Society) The […]
Elizabeth Swann was an active and devoted champion of liberal and progressive causes alongside her husband, Liberal MP Charles Swann. […]
… purely human and natural ethics, and not theology, was the source of this pioneer woman’s enthusiasm for justice, even […]
… a man who thinks himself bound to all offices of Humanity. Ephraim Chambers, self-composed epitaph Ephraim Chambers was an […]
Ethel Leach was a Liberal councillor, social reformer, justice of the peace, and the first female mayor of Great Yarmouth. […]
If any delegate present thinks that the Fabian Society was wise from the hour of its birth, let him forthwith […]
In order to find meaning to one’s life, one must find a meaning in the life of the [human] race. […]
This conference is resolved to strive for the achievement of peace, justice and tolerance in Ireland, and holds that outmoded […]
To have thus assuaged the temper of controversy, to have softened much deep-seated prejudice and to have disposed some of […]
A distinctively Edwardian rationalist radical, he himself agreed that he was a crank – ‘a small instrument that makes revolutions’. […]
F.J. Gould was an influential educationist, writer, and humanist, whose tireless work towards secularising education helped to lay the groundwork […]
Much needs changing in the world of today, and humanists will be found in large numbers in the ranks of […]
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 […]
But in the more civilised communities, as in ancient Greece, there has always been a minority who, through some speculative […]
Girton College at the University of Cambridge has educated and employed a host of remarkable humanists and freethinkers, many of […]
Godlessness is negative. It merely denies the existence of god. Atheism is positive. It asserts the condition that results from […]
The Conscience has eclipsed the Scriptures; Science has destroyed the belief in Divine Interposition; Democracy and Civism have shown men […]
The object of this Society is: To increase the knowledge, the love, and the practice of the right. Its bond […]
That an institution or a practice is customary in no presumption of its goodness. Harriet Taylor Mill Harriet Taylor Mill […]
Harry Snell was a socialist politician and campaigner, a devoted advocate of the Ethical Movement and a key figure in […]
Harry Stopes-Roe was one of the most tireless and dedicated humanist campaigners of the 20th century. Son of the influential […]
It is in service to others, it is as members of the community, that our existence lies. Hermann Bondi, Humanism […]
Hilda Caroline Miall-Smith was a teacher and activist, a graduate of University College London, and a member of the London […]
The Humanist Broadcasting Council was established in 1959, in consultation with the BBC, to advocate for the inclusion of humanist […]
While much of the Humanist Heritage website looks back to the earlier years of the organised humanist movement, recent decades […]
When we are asked to believe that nothing but a supernatural ideal can inspire and sustain a life-time of complete […]
We must grow out of the crude and unreal ideas of immortality and content ourselves with the only kind of […]
Belfast-born Jack McDowell was an activist, educator, politician, and atheist, whose humanism was evident in a lifetime of work for […]
The notion that a man shall judge for himself what he is told, sifting the evidence and weighing the conclusions, […]
The difference and variety of our human family more and more seems to me to be a wise provision that […]
The time has arrived for us humans to stop leaning on ideas for a creator god; we should get down […]
The moral value of a belief in eternal life is a doubtful matter. But this is certain, that where rest […]
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 […]
It is impossible that Theology can throw any light upon either morality or jurisprudence. Jeremy Bentham Philosopher and jurist Jeremy […]
We can’t help the universe, but at least we can do something to help ourselves. Can’t we? John Boyd, Across […]
Throughout his life, Professor of Philosophy, John Muirhead, sought to put his ethical principles into practice. Indeed, whilst philosophers are […]
I fear their creed as we have always fearedthe lifted hand against unfettered thought. John Hewitt, ‘The Glens’ in Collected […]
In the beginning natural philosophers tried to understand the world around them. Trying to do that they hit upon the […]
I will call no being good, who is not what I mean when I apply that epithet to my fellow-creatures; […]
All religious theories, schemes and systems, which embrace notions of cosmogony, or which otherwise reach into the domain of science, […]
It is not to the point to say that the views of Lucretius and Bruno, of Darwin and Spencer, may […]
Julia Huxley was a feminist and freethinker, who profoundly influenced a generation of girls who attended the school she founded […]
What the sciences discover about the natural world and about the origins, nature and destiny of man is the truth […]
Can there be a more important human condition than dignity? Without it, we are bitter, downtrodden, unheard, humiliated, embarrassed and […]
… the responsibility for our ethical decisions is entirely ours and cannot be shifted to anybody else; neither to God, […]
It lies within our power, if we so desire it, to make the familiar world we inhabit more worthy of […]
Order is our Basis; Improvement our Aim; and Friendship our Principle. Annual Report of the Neighbourhood Guild, 1895 Leighton Hall […]
Formed in the wake of the Gay News blasphemy trial, GALHA (now LGBT Humanists) came into being in 1979 as […]
The London Ethical Society was the UK’s first, founded in 1886 to pursue ‘a rational conception of human good’: establishing […]
We hold that only by making happiness for those around us, and by endeavoring, individually, to make the world a […]
The realisation of the possibility of a secular rational morality opens up a new perspective before the modern world… It […]
Mackenzie Hall is a community space in the village of Brockweir, Gloucestershire, given by Millicent Mackenzie in memory of her […]
Object: to provide an ‘open forum’ for the fearless consideration of modern problems relating to ethics, sociology, education, political theory, […]
With these basic [humanist] beliefs there go commonly two corollaries. First, that virtue is a matter of promoting human well-being, […]
They weren’t just trying to sell something to parents, they were helping them to understand how to play with and […]
Is it not the duty of every person to promote the happiness of others as much as lies in their […]
The attainment of the greatest possible amount of social happiness I take to be the noblest of human aims; the […]
Mary Sheepshanks was a humanist who saw her feminist, pacifist, and cosmopolitan beliefs as being natural expressions of her humanist […]
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 […]
Why are these minds left without the means of obtaining that knowledge which they so ardently desire and why are […]
Millicent Mackenzie was a pioneering educationist and suffragist, who – alongside her husband, John Stuart Mackenzie – gave significant support […]
Its aim will be to secularise education and make moral training the chief aim of the school life. A great […]
…no child should be made ashamed or uncomfortable on account of his father’s opinions, or lack of opinions, on subjects […]
Nellie Freeman was an indefatigable organiser within the Ethical Union (today’s Humanists UK) for decades of her life. Beginning in […]
A brief history of humanism and secularism in Northern Ireland Organised humanism began in Northern Ireland in the 19th century, […]
I am a humanist, a rationalist. My mother said to me, some weeks before she died, that she would die ‘an unrepentant […]
Socialism emerged, in the early decades of the nineteenth century, as a humanist ideal of universal emancipation – the ideal […]
I have been the more bold in exposing my opinion because I believe it to be the dictates of truth […]
Positivism is a philosophical system based on the writings of French thinker Auguste Comte, which flourished from the 1830s onwards. […]
Humanists UK began as the Union of Ethical Societies in 1896, becoming the Ethical Union in 1920, the British Humanist […]
Prior’s Field School was founded in 1902 by Julia Arnold Huxley. Born in 1862, Julia grew up in an intellectual […]
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 […]
Richard Congreve was a devoted follower of Auguste Comte, whose positivist philosophies and ‘Religion of Humanity’ inspired Congreve to open […]
Robert Owen was a utopian socialist, philanthropist, and reformer, whose own religious scepticism fostered his desire for a secular society, […]
Robert Owen, the son of a Newtown saddler and ironmonger, became one of the most successful mill owners of the […]
Rochdale Pioneers Museum occupies the building at 31 Toad Lane where, in 1844, 28 working class people came together to […]
The Ruskin School Home was founded by socialist writer and teacher [Harry] Bellerby Lowerison (1863–1935) in Norfolk in 1900, following […]
Ruth Homan was an educationist, women’s welfare campaigner, and one of the founding members of the West London Ethical Society […]
Without this mutual trust and dependability amongst people who differ radically, there cannot be political and religious freedom. H.J. Blackham […]
Sophie Bryant was an Anglo-Irish mathematician, feminist, suffragist, teacher, and promoter of moral education. She played a key role in […]
Without denying or affirming a life after death, or reality beyond experience… we can (without injury to our moral life) […]
Under its successive names, adopted or given… is traceable a constant endeavour to study carefully, and keep abreast of, the […]
Stanton Coit was a pioneer of the Ethical movement in England and the founder of the West London Ethical Society, […]
I am a feminist, a rebel, and a suffragist – a believer, therefore, in sex-equality and militant action. I desire […]
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 […]
Not by the Creed but by the Deed. Motto of the Society for Ethical Culture of New York, founded in […]
The Open University was founded in 1969 with the ambition of providing access to higher education for people who had […]
The Union of Ethical Societies (now Humanists UK) was formed in 1896, joining together existing ethical societies for fellowship and […]
Thomas Hill Green was a philosopher, educator, and a Liberal, whose idealist philosophy (with its practical implications) was a significant […]
I think that believing in the brotherhood of man is not just a matter of signing these letters, it is […]
Its main concern is with peace and security and with human welfare, in so far as they can be subserved […]
The Universities Tests Act, which ended religious discrimination in admissions and employment at the universities of Oxford, Cambridge, and Durham […]
University College London was founded in 1826 as the University of London; the city’s first university, and a consciously secular […]
…the smallest experience is sufficient to convince that it is more pleasing, to be at peace than at enmity with […]
If living does not give value, wisdom and meaning to life, then there is no sense in living at all. […]
The good life… rests for its justification on no external authority, and on no system of supernatural rewards or punishments, […]
The one thing in which I am interested wholly and completely is the getting to know something about human society […]
Our interest, it seems to me, lies with so much of the past as may serve to guide our actions […]
All moral and political wisdom should tend mainly to this, the just distribution of the physical means of happiness. William […]
Conscious morality cannot exist in any being except so far as it can look behind, before, and around; and can […]