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For Immediate Release
Humanism and Naturalism/free public lecture
November, 2008
Tom Clark, Center for Naturalism, 617-480-8846
Tom Ferrick, Humanist Association of Massachusetts, 617-547-1497
Greg Epstein, Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard,
617-495-5986
The
Center for Naturalism, Humanist Association of Massachusetts,
and Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard
present
“Living
Without God: New Directions for Humanists, Atheists and Secularists”
a free public lecture by
Ronald Aronson
Wayne State University
2 pm
Sunday, November
16, 2008
Science Center, Auditorium A
Harvard Yard, Cambridge
(Cambridge, MA) The
Center for Naturalism,
the
Humanist Association of Massachusetts
and the Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard are pleased
to present “Living
Without God: New Directions for Humanists, Atheists and Secularists,”
a lecture by author
Ronald Aronson
on Sunday, November 16, 2 pm. The lecture is free and open to all,
wheelchair accessible, at the Harvard Science Center, Auditorium
A, Harvard Yard, 1 Oxford St., Cambridge. For
further information call Tom Clark,
Center for Naturalism, at 617-480-8846, Tom Ferrick, Humanist
Association of Massachusetts, at 617-547-1497, or Greg
Epstein, Humanist Chaplaincy at Harvard, at 617-
495-5986.
Lecture description:
In this discussion of his book
Living
Without God, Aronson picks up where the
writers - Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins, Daniel
Dennett, and Christopher Hitchens - he named "The
New Atheists" (in Bookforum) leave off, turning to face the need for a
coherent and contemporary secular philosophy that will answer life's vital
questions.
As Aronson argues, living without God means turning toward something.
Grounded in the sense that we are dependent and interconnected beings,
rooted in nature, history and society, Living without God explores
contemporary answers to Immanuel Kant's three great questions: What can I
know? What ought I to do? What can I hope?
Aronson stresses how much knowledge humans have accumulated,
verified, confirmed, and implemented: dozens, hundreds, thousands of things
that are vital for human understanding and well-being. Today so much that
was once cloaked in darkness is known, and so much that is really essential
to our lives is knowable. We have developed methods of analysis, synthesis,
and reasoning that can be taught and learned. All of this is now part of
what John Dewey called the "social consciousness of the race" and it belongs
to all of us, waiting to be claimed and used. We sell ourselves short to
pretend otherwise.
About the speaker:
Ronald Aronson is author or editor of nine books, including
Jean-Paul Sartre: Philosophy in the World and Camus and Sartre: Story
of a Friendship and the Quarrel that Ended It. Distinguished Professor
of the History of Ideas at Wayne State University, he has lectured widely,
including at the University of KwaZulu-Natal and other South African
universities. He is a frequent contributor to the
Nation, USA Today,*
and other widely read publications.
###END###
*Note:
See Aronson's USA Today article,
Don't
Count Us Out - A ‘nation
of believers’ must not marginalize — or worse undercount — secularists, an
invisible minority.
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