Secularism
This article concerns secularism\, the exclusion of religion and supernatural beliefs.For other forms of being secular, and perspective on the terminology underlying the word "secularism", see secularity.
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|align=center bgcolor=#ccccff|This article is related
to Liberalism
|-Secularism means:
- in philosophy, the belief that one's own life can be best lived, and the universe best understood, with little or no reference to a god or gods or other supernatural concepts.
- in society, any of a range of situations where a society less automatically assumes religious beliefs to be either widely shared or a basis for conflict in various forms, than in recent generations of the same society.
- in government, a policy of avoiding entanglement between government and religion (ranging from reducing ties to a state church to promoting secularism in society).
In studies of religion, modern Western societies are generally recognized as secular:
- There is near-complete freedom of religion (you can believe in any religion or none at all, with little legal or social sanction);
- Religion does not dictate political decisions, though the moral views originating in religious traditions remain important in political debate in some countries, such as the United States; in some others, such as France (see Laïcité), religious references are considered out-of-place in mainstream politics.
- Religion is excluded from the public sphere.
- Religion is not as important in most people's lives as it once was.
See also
- Ideas that are considered forms of secularism include
- Organizations that advocate it include
- National Secular Society
- Leicester Secular Society
- Fellowship of Reason
- Contrary trends include
- religion
- Stephen L. Carter's views as expressed in The Culture of Disbelief
External links
- American United for Separation of Church and State
- Leicester Secular Society
- National Secular Society (UK)