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淺談「人本論」(3之1)
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0. 前言

慕陶網友發表過很多篇關於「人本主義」的論述(慕陶 2010a, -b, -c, 2009a, -b, -c)。我曾經嚴厲的批評過其中的一篇(胡卜凱 2009)。該文以「批判」他「我以為華人就是比較常說謊。」以及「相對來說,我認為一般西方人比較誠實。」這兩個胡說八道為主,沒有怎麼討論「人本主義」的內涵。如我曾經說過,我其實並沒有能力討論慕陶網友的大作,因為我看不懂它們大部分文字在說些什麼。就我看得懂的部份來說,我完全不能苟同他對「人本主義」的解讀(慕陶 2010b, 慕陶 2009a: 留言64, 66)。最近比較空閒,就我對「人本論」的了解,在此略表淺見,歡迎賜教。對這個主張有興趣的網友,不妨將我們兩個人的詮釋做個對照和比較。我當然也歡迎慕陶網友重出江湖,針對我的論點、事實陳述、和理論根據批駁賜教。

順代說一句,我接受當代「人本論」中的「現世人本論」(請見以下第2.2節)。

1. 正名

英文的humanism有五個通用但不同意涵的「所指」,以及一些相關的用法。我認為它們並不宜全部用中文「人本主義」這個術語來表達。以下略做說明,歡迎賜教。

a. 西元14世紀開始,歐洲人通過阿拉伯人的介紹,對古希臘和古羅馬時代的典籍、文化、和思想重新加以研究。這一系列活動從義大利開始,一直蔓延到英、法、德、西、荷蘭等國。可以總稱為「西方古典人文研究」;簡稱為「人文研究」、「人文思潮」、或「人文運動」。它開啟或導致了有名的「文藝復興(運動)」、稍後的宗教改革、和18世紀的啟蒙運動。由於「人文」一詞還有其他意義,一個人在文章中第一次使用這些簡稱時,需要加上引號。
b. 隨著上述「人文研究」而建立的大學教育體系(包括課程、內容、教學方法等等)和教育思想。前者是今天「文學院」(College of Liberal Arts)教學內容的先河。視其特定所指,它們可以稱為「人文教育」或「人文教育觀」等等。
c. 隨著上述「人文研究」、宗教改革、和啟蒙運動而發展出來的人生觀、世界觀、和/或處世態度,也就是下文討論的主題。視持有這種立場者的態度或戰鬥性,可以分別稱之為(當代)「人本論」、「人本觀」、或「人本主義」;以下將合稱為(當代)「人本論」。
d. 在醫療界以病人福祉和權益(而不是以法律、花費金額、或成本效益)為決策依據的立場。可以稱之為「人本論的醫療觀」。
e. 一種關懷廣泛人類的立場。

以上分類根據(Free Dictionary 2010; Wikipedia 2010)。此外,有「人本觀共和論」或「人本論共和主義」的理論(Moulakis 2007);沙特有一篇頗有名聲的演講 -- 《存在主義是一種人本主義》(Sartre 1946/1989: 345 – 369頁)。我沒有能力對它們深論,在此表過不提。人本論和「人道主義」則大概是三千里的遠房表親。

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六類無神論者 - A. Brown
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The six types of atheist

 

A new study in the US seeks to break down atheists into distinct categories. Which one do you fall into?

 

Andrew Brown, 07/15/13

 

You'd have thought the scientific study of atheism was a no-brainer. Just as religions can be understood from the outside using all the ordinary tools of sociology, psychology, economics, or historical understanding, so can different varieties of atheism. And surely this would be a good thing. Yet there has been surprisingly little work in this direction, and surprisingly little of it has been done or publicised by atheists.

 

In this country there has been Matthew Engelke's study of the British Humanist Association, and some work done at Lancaster University, too. In America, a study has just been published by the University of Tennessee, based on a survey of 1,153 American atheists, biased towards the south-eastern states.

 

They found six categories, all of whom are represented in the comments here, though few form a year-round population. The largest group (37%) was what I would call "cultural non-believers", and what they call "academic" or "intellectual atheists": people who are well-educated, interested in religion, informed about it, but not themselves believers. I call them "cultural" because they are at home in a secular culture which takes as axiomatic that exclusive religious truth claims must be false. Essentially, they are how I imagined the majority readership of Comment is free's belief section.

 

They are more than twice as common as the "anti-theists" whose characteristics hardly need spelling out here:

 

If any subset of our non-belief sample fit the "angry, argumentative, dogmatic" stereotype, it is the anti-theists. This group scored the highest amongst our other typologies on empirical psychometric measures of anger, autonomy, agreeableness, narcissism, and dogmatism while scoring lowest on measures of positive relations with others … the assertive anti-theist both proactively and aggressively asserts their views towards others when appropriate, seeking to educate the theists in the passé nature of belief and theology.

 

Nonetheless, these people made up only 14% of their sample, and all other research that I know of would place their proportion much lower.

 

The other two noteworthy groups are those to whom religion is completely and entirely irrelevant, "non-theists", and what the researchers call "ritual atheists", who overlap quite a lot with "seeker-agnostics", both of whom might be targeted under the marketing category known as "spiritual but not religious". What defines them is the ability to treat religious practices as something like acupuncture or Chinese medicine: something that works even though the explanation is obviously nonsense:

 

One of the defining characteristics regarding ritual atheists/agnostics is that they may find utility in the teachings of some religious traditions. They see these as more or less philosophical teachings of how to live life and achieve happiness than a path to transcendental liberation. Ritual atheist/agnostics find utility in tradition and ritual.

 

As the authors observe, this covers a large spectrum of American Jewry.

 

(One further category, "activist", is used to label those who hold strong beliefs on ethical and environmental issues. Pretty much what the term means in lay parlance.)

 

I think the English, or more generally European results, would be different. The typologies are broadly the same, but since Christianity is much less of a marker in European culture wars, and certainly not an active one in the UK, you would expect the distribution of categories to be different, and for people to be very much less self-conscious about unbelief and less likely to regard it as a salient feature of their personalities.

 

But it would be interesting to know how commenters here see themselves.

 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/andrewbrown/2013/jul/15/six-types-of-atheist



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書評:靈長類學家的人本論與倫理觀 - B. Maroviche
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If Apes Could Talk to Atheists 

 

(A book review)

 

The Bonobo and the Atheist: In Search of Humanism Among the Primates

by Frans De Waal, W.W. Norton , 2013

 

Beatric Marovich, 05/28/13

 

For centuries, a dominant majority of Western philosophers and intellectuals have asserted that humans are the “rational animal.” Our ability to reason, so the logic goes, is the one thing separating us from the plethora of other animals on the planet. Instinct, passion, and emotion, traditionally assigned to the animal side of life, often meant that being “good” -- being the sort of human who behaves morally -- required a removal of the animal or “beastly” nature that resides somewhere deep within our fleshy bodies.

 

In recent decades, however, this fragile logic has been falling apart. It’s become increasingly clear that while our digital technologies behave quite rationally, they are often deeply cruel. And on the other side of the ledger, the accumulation of data on animal behavior makes it more and more difficult to support the claim that “goodness” is something that only humans exhibit.

 

Primatologists, who study our evolutionary kin, have been in the vanguard of researchers and thinkers to upset the territorial boundaries that demarcate a spotlessly pure sort of human life. Jane Goodall’s fieldwork in chimpanzee communities allowed her to witness things like a young male chimp doing a rhythmic dance in front of a waterfall. It appeared, to Goodall, reverent and seemingly purposeless. She’s speculated that this might be evidence of something like ritualistic religion in the lives of other primates.

 

Public debates about religion in the contemporary U.S. are still rooted in debates about belief. Prominent public atheists like Richard Dawkins speak about religion as though it’s something we need to understand rationally. How would these public debates change if we were to start thinking about the animal edges of religious life -- the ways in which religious life has more to do with so-called animal instinct than we’ve often imagined? This is, precisely, where primatologist Frans de Waal’s new book The Bonobo and the Atheist (W.W. Norton, 2013) appears to be intervening into these hot-button conflicts.

 

People like Dawkins, says de Waal, are going about things in the wrong manner. “The question is not so much whether religion is true or false,” he writes, “but how it shapes our lives, and what might possibly take its place if we were to get rid of it the way an Aztec priest rips the beating heart out of a virgin.” What this violent metaphor is meant to gesture towards is “the gaping hole” that would be left by “the removed organ’s functions.” It seems to suggest that religion is some serviceable physiological element in the human body politic.

 

But de Waal isn’t really trying to “save” religion from atheists like Dawkins; there’s much about religion that de Waal finds troubling and problematic. The big targets for de Waal are what he calls “top down morality” and human exceptionalism. Top down morality is linked to the assertion that morality comes to human life from somewhere “on high,” which might be taken to mean that human life receives its morality from a transcendent, out-of-this-world, divine.

 

But de Waal notes that top down morality isn’t a purely religious problem. He attacks, for example, the philosophical presumption mentioned earlier, that morality is a matter of reasoning -- that we reason our way “up” to moral action or decision. Likewise, de Waal takes issue with human exceptionalism -- the idea that morality is something that only humans are capable of -- regardless of its origin. Religion is a target, for de Waal, to the extent that it supports each of these presumptions.

 

The book, then, is a conversation about the common ground among atheists and bonobos. According to De Waal, for example, both make it clear that religion has -- lamentably and unjustifiably -- been given credit for human morality. De Waal emphasizes over and over again that morality is probably embedded into our biologies, though he also seems to suggest that the communal life of primates like bonobos may also indicate that this social thing we call “religion” is more biological than many atheists would have us believe.

 

The bulk of the book is spent supporting his central claim that morality comes from the “bottom up” -- that it’s an aspect of social life we share with other creatures. In this regard de Waal’s case is deeply convincing. Presenting evidence from his studies of bonobo and chimpanzee communities (as well as work done among other animal populations, by other researchers), de Waal argues that morality comes from a kind of “altruistic impulse” that’s part of our complex embodied emotional life as social primates. He points to example after example of forms of care in the social life of other creatures -- instances where they look after the welfare of one another, even when it doesn’t appear to be in their own best interest as individual entities. Apes, particularly bonobos, display many examples of what often goes by the name of “goodness” in human life. De Waal describes this as a form of “community concern” and suggests that this is the crux, or seat, of a bottom up analysis of morality.

 

What this community concern also marks, for de Waal, is a point of distinction between the social primate we call human, and other creatures. That is to say, he believes that humans display a level of community concern that’s more nuanced and abstract than what he’s witnessed in other creatures. “Humans,” he argues, have taken “community concern to a level unmatched by anything seen in the apes.” What he believes this means is that humanity, “may have taken moral evolution into its own hands.”

 

De Waal seems to believe that religion may have been part and parcel of this “moral evolution,” but that it may have done its job at this moment in human history. As a lapsed Dutch Catholic, de Waal promotes what boils down to a version of secular humanism, suggesting that this should be a viable trade-off that could help human societies ease religion out of the body politic without ripping it out like the virgin’s beating heart.

 

Secular humanism has, of course, also been accused of advancing forms of human exceptionalism by thinkers working with an eco-critical lens, but this is not a part of de Waal’s analysis. The book is ultimately most interesting and engaging when speaking directly about the social life of non-human primates. De Waal’s analyses of religion are much weaker.

 

On one level, it does seem that de Waal is attempting to destabilize the simplistic lines that have been drawn between complex, entangled phenomena, such as religion and science or religion and the secular. (He suggests, for instance, that scientists, as a community, get something akin to spiritual satisfaction from their involvement with scientific discovery.) But, while he argues that religion is “universal” -- part of “our social skin” as humans -- it sometimes seems that “religion,” for him, is basically Christianity, or a monotheistic belief in “the almighty God.”

 

This is not, as generations of scholars have been at pains to argue, a human universal. De Waal makes the claim that humanism is “nonreligious,” but it’s never entirely clear what makes it so -- simply a lack of belief in the God of monotheism? De Waal’s latest book may help to shift the rhetorical frame of these high-profile, popular public debates over the role of religion in public life, but it remains unclear how much it will contribute to a more nuanced analysis of religion itself.

 

http://www.religiondispatches.org/books/science/7113/if_apes_could_talk_to_atheists

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淺談「人本論」(3之2)
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2.     當代人本論

 

2.1  簡介

 

就我的了解,根據對「神」或「上帝」的看法,當代「人本論」有兩種不同的立場。

 

1)    現世人本論

 

古代中國、印度、希臘、和羅馬也有以「人」或人的「價值」為思考第一優先順位的「人本論」。但當時的宗教並沒有現在的影響力;同時由於自然科學知識還沒有發展到具有一般性解釋能力的程度,人們對自然也抱著尊敬或尊崇的態度,所以在對神宗教或超自然因素的立場上,古代「人本論」沒有當代「現世人本論」這樣鮮明或強烈。

 

起源於對西方古典思想和文化的研究,強調此生此世中「人」的「價值」和「主動性」,同時對宗教採取排斥或存而不論的立場,可稱為「現世人本論」。

 

我在網路上看到幾篇文章闡述「基於耶穌教誨的人本論」(Broadhurst 2010a, 2010b)。作者宣揚耶穌在倫理學上的教導,肯定「人」或人的「價值」;但他並不接受「神」或「上帝」的概念和論述。這個主張是「現世人本論」下的一個立場,作者鮮明的揭櫫耶穌個人的身教和言教。雖然在英文字面上,它和「基督教人本論」是同一個詞,但(我認為)這個立場不應該歸類在「宗教人本論」之下。

 

2)    宗教人本論

 

「宗教人本論」可以拿馬理當的「基督教人本論」為例來說明。馬理當強調「人」的存在和「人」的價值,這是「基督教人本論」一詞中「人本論」三個字的所指;同時,馬理當也堅守傳統基督教的基本神學理論,這是「基督教人本論」一詞中「基督教」三個字的所指(Clouse 2010; Word IQ 2010a)。換句話說,宗教人本論同時肯定「人」的價值和「神」的存在以及「神」的超自然地位。我不知道在回教和猶太教中是否有類似的立場,理論上應該有這個可能(Word IQ 2010b)

 

2.2  現世人本論

 

本節討論「現世人本論」。

 

人本論者發佈過多次宣言來表達她/他們的主張和立場。「國際人本論者及倫理聯盟」在2002年有《阿姆斯特丹(人本論者) 宣言》(IHEU 2002),在2005年有《巴黎(人本論者)宣言》等(IHEU 2005)。「美國人本論者協會」在1973年發佈過《第二次人本論者宣言》(Kurtz/Wilson 1973),在2003年有《第三次人本論者宣言》(AHA 2003)。《第一次人本論者宣言》則由R. B. 布拉格發表於1933(Bragg 1933)。網路上也有很多闡釋「人本論」的文章(BHA 2010; Edwords 1989)

 

這些宣言和文章的意旨大致相同,內容相當「清楚明確」,只是不同時段的(宣言)起草者或作者根據當時社會潮流和/或自己的基本思想,強調人本論主張中不同的要點。以下只討論所有這些宣言和文章中都包含的三個關鍵主張。

 

a.     不接受以超自然因素來解釋社會和自然現象;

b.     強調(個人以及人類)的地位、價值、尊嚴、和「主動性」。

c.     運用知識來改善人類的生活狀況

 

由於第一個立場,人本論的基本假設可以包括唯物論和自然主義(Berger 2005)。大多數人本論者對宗教採取尊重(其他人)個人信仰的態度,但他/她們自己沒有宗教信仰。人本論者也不接受「上帝存在。」或「神(鬼、精靈、兔寶寶、耶誕老人、,,,)存在。」這類命題。從而,人本論者使用理性思考、科學方法、邏輯推論等等步驟或行為來追求知識(CFSH 2010)理性」一詞在此指:

 

根據而且只根據過去的經驗做為當下決策和規劃未來的依據。

 

它和哲學「理性論」一詞的「理性」無關,近於韋伯「效益理性」(或譯「工具理性」)中的「理性」。

 

從第一個立場得到的另一個結論是:

 

人本論者並不認為「『人性』是『善』或是『惡』?」是一個值得討論的議題。

 

人本論者認為「人性」的基礎是「生物性」;由於人有大腦和隨之而來的學習能力,人的社會行為以及他/她對自己行為後果的判斷,主要來自「社會建構」。傳統倫理學中「性善」和「性惡」的爭論,在人本論者的思考架構中並沒有意義或討論價值。也就是說,不論一個人的天性是什麼,在求生存這個要求下,環境會影響或改變一個人的行為;另一方面,不論一個人的天性是什麼,他/她的選擇和行為是學習和思考的結果。

 

至於「善」、「惡」並沒有絕對普遍的標準或「所指」,則是哲學以及社會學層次的議題,我就不在這裏討論。

 

由於第二個立場,人本論者堅持民主、法治、自由、人權等概念也捍衛根據這些概念所發展和設計出來的政治制度。他/她們不接受任何絕對的權威,也不接受任何凌駕於「人」之上的教條價值或意識型態。前者如「社會傳統」、「民族救星」、或「一黨專政」之類,後者如「國家尊嚴」、「全民福祉」、或「(無產)階級利益」之類。我再度強調,在人本論者的思想中,「人」同時指個人和人類。

 

人本論者在倫理學上的主張和立場非常鮮明。一言以蔽之,所謂「道德」只有在社會脈絡下才有意義。因此,在尊重其他人的權益這個前提下,一個人的自由和人權不可侵犯,他/她同時也必須為自己的行為負責。

 

第三個立場除了是根據前兩個立場的邏輯推論結果,當然也延續著啟蒙運動的理念。這也是有些反對「啟蒙運動」理念者,自稱「反人本論者」的原因(Wikipedia 2010: 7)

 

有些人認為「人本論者」過度訴求「人」的價值或利益,忽略了地球生態(環境和其他生物),因而他/她們也以「反人本論者」為號召,請上網自行搜尋這類主張。



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 3.     先秦思想中的人本觀

 

我沒有什麼資格談論先秦思想。但就我經常閱讀或引用的幾本書來說,如《四書》、《老子》、《孫子》、《管子》、《墨子》等等,或多或少都包含以上我在2.2節所討論,「人本論」的三個關鍵主張。先秦思想是有名的缺乏體系,因此,只能稱之為人本觀而不到「論」或「主義」的層次。

 

我不怎麼懂「新儒家」的理論。我試著閱讀過幾本介紹它的書,但實在不太看得懂。但就我粗淺的了解,牟宗三先生對「儒家」學說所做最大的disservice,就是鼓吹「儒教」的概念。其他因素不說,這種努力很可能表示他(和其他有類似想法的人)不太懂「宗教」的基本要素和/(《四書》中的)孔、孟思想。

 

4.     結論

 

1.1    人本思想古已有之。

1.2    當代人本論是簡單明瞭的主張。

1.3    現世人本論者堅持人的價值和否認超自然因素/力量的存在。

1.4    現世人本論者實踐理性思考和維護民主政治來達到改善人類生活這個目標。

 

參考文章和書籍:

 

* AHA 2003, Humanist Manifesto III, http://www.americanhumanist.org/who_we_are/about_humanism/Humanist_Manifesto_III

* Berger, D. 2005, The Roots of Humanism, http://www.ihumanism.org/2005/01/the-roots-of-humanism.html

* Bragg, R. B. 1933, Humanist Manifesto I, http://www.americanhumanist.org/who_we_are/about_humanism/Humanist_Manifesto_I

* British Humanist Association (BHA) 2010, Humanism, http://www.humanism.org.uk/humanism

* Broadhurst, A. G. 2010a, Welcome to the Christian Humanist, http://christianhumanist.net/default.aspx

* Broadhurst, A. G. 2010b, Christianity Without God, http://christianhumanist.net/intro.aspx

* Clouse, R. G. 2010, Christian Humanism, http://mb-soft.com/believe/txn/chrishum.htm

* Council For Secular Humanism (CFSH), 2010, What Is Secular Humanism?, http://www.secularhumanism.org/index.php?page=what&section=main

* Edwords, F. 1989, What is Humanism? http://www.jcn.com/humanism.html

* Free Dictionary 2010, Humanism, http://www.thefreedictionary.com/humanism

* IHEU 2002, Amsterdam Declaration, http://www.iheu.org/adamdecl.htm

* IHEU 2005, Paris Declaration, http://www.iheu.org/parisdeclaration

* Kurtz, P./Wilson, E. H. 1973, Humanist Manifesto II, http://www.americanhumanist.org/who_we_are/about_humanism/Humanist_Manifesto_II

* Moulakis, A. 2007, Civic Humanism, http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/humanism-civic/

* Sartre, J-P 1946/1989, in Kaufman, W. Ed., Mairet, P. Tr., Existentialism from Dostoyevsky to Sartre, The New American Library, NYC, http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/sartre/works/exist/sartre.htm

* Wikipedia 2010, humanism, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humanism

* Word IQ 2010a, Christian humanism – Definition, http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Christian_humanism

* Word IQ 2010b, Religious humanism – Definition, http://www.wordiq.com/definition/Religious_humanism

* 胡卜凱 2009Re:#6466 -- 概念必須清楚明確之慕陶網友的「人本主義」 -- 中國社會的真正問題核心:我的愚見留言69http://tb.chinatimes.com/forum1.asp?ArticleID=1325686

* 慕陶 2009a中國社會的真正問題核心:我的愚見http://tb.chinatimes.com/forum1.asp?ArticleID=1325686

* 慕陶 2009b強司法時代與人本主義精神http://tb.chinatimes.com/forum1.asp?ArticleID=1317622

* 慕陶 2009c從阿扁在試煉中的抉擇談到中國文化的人本主義色彩http://tb.chinatimes.com/forum1.asp?ArticleID=1299570

* 慕陶 2010a綜論傳統中國文化 -- 內在超越的人本主義http://tb.chinatimes.com/forum1.asp?ArticleID=1450690

* 慕陶 2010b人本主義概說http://tb.chinatimes.com/forum1.asp?ArticleID=1434369

* 慕陶 2010c論傳統中國社會的人本主義實驗http://tb.chinatimes.com/forum1.asp?ArticleID=1374475



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