Antihumanism
any system or mode of thought or action in which interests, values, and dignity predominate.
devotion to or study of the .
(sometimes initial capital letter) the studies, principles, or culture of the .
philosophy. a variety of ethical theory and practice that emphasizes reason, scientific inquiry, and fulfillment in the natural world and often rejects the importance of belief in g-d.
noun
the denial of any power or moral value superior to that of humanity; the rejection of religion in favour of a belief in the advancement of humanity by its own efforts
a philosophical position that stresses the autonomy of human reason in contradistinction to the authority of the church
(often capital) a cultural movement of the renaissance, based on cl-ssical studies
interest in the welfare of people
n.
along with humanist used in a variety of philosophical and theological senses 16c.-18c., especially ones imitating latin humanitas “education befitting a cultivated man.” see human + -ism. main modern sense in reference to revival of interest in the cl-ssics traces to c.1860; as a pragmatic system of thought, defined 1907 by co-founder f.c.s. schiller as: “the perception that the philosophical problem concerns human beings striving to comprehend a world of human experience by the resources of human minds.”
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