By Weldon E. Warnock The most dangerous of all college disciplines is the field of psychology. Freud and his humanistic disciples have taken over this academic discipline (that is studied by 85 percent of today’s college students), and they use it to propagate the five basic doctrines of humanism: 1. atheism; 2. evolution; 3. amorality; 4. …
Yearly Archives: 2012
Humanism And The Family
By Robert E. Waldron The home is the incubator of society. The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world whether it is the hand of a loving, godly mother, or the hand of a state trained employee. Society needs but a generation to change if the minds of that generation can be trained from infancy …
The Goal of Humanism
By Mike Willis As a philosophy, humanism has several goals. Among some of humanism’s positive goals are: (1) freedom in the realm of civil liberties; (2) world peace; (3) elimination of poverty; (4) world unity; etc. These aspirations may be summarized by saying that humanism hopes to make this world “heaven” on earth. Humanists deny life …
Secular Humanism and Religion
By Daniel H. King Upon first consideration one would think that secular humanism would have very little to do with religion. If both concepts are properly defined they appear to be mortal enemies. In fact, however, they have come to be friends in some cases. How that came to be was not because humanism changed so …
