Humanism stands for the building of a more humane society. Learn more about the rational, ethical worldview that is humanism
- Find a group near you
Explore our map of members
Search our list of members
- Map Locations
Map Locations for Humanists-United
Kingdom
- Fundamental Principals
The Amsterdam Declaration
Available in 37 different languages
- History of Humanism
The earliest written humanist ideas
A global and human tradition
- Humanism FAQs
Frequently asked questions
Find out more about humanism
- Humanism
Humanism: a global and human
tradition-Learn more about...
- Find a group near you
You can fundraise for the organization using different means that is convenient. We help children enroll and remain in school
Search results
Both Schiller's theory of truth and meaning (i.e. Schiller's pragmatism) derive their justification from an examination of thought from what he calls his humanist viewpoint (his new name for concrete metaphysics).
Ferdinand Canning Scott Schiller (1864-1937) was a German-British philosopher. His philosophy is often aligned with the pragmatism of William James, though Schiller himself referred to it as “humanism.”
Apr 21, 2017 · Schiller lauds the Greeks for their simple, harmonious relation to their world and laments modern society’s enslavement to its manufactured needs. Recent history had shown with painful clarity that if the moral character of the people is not developed, even the most idealistic revolution will fail.
The British philosopher F. C. S. Schiller (1864–1937) was a leading pragmatist in the early twentieth century. His critiques of formal logic and his attempts to construct a humanist logic, derived from an anti-foundationalist humanism, are recognized as lasting philosophical achievements.
Schiller defined it as an “ethical” humanism; thus ethics was seen as the highest aspiration of humans, who by making reality have, as Peirce noted, a part in the creation. In other words, Schiller viewed pragmatism as a part of a larger whole—namely, humanism.
Schiller's views, which he called at various times humanism, voluntarism, and personalism, as well as pragmatism, were strongly influenced by William James; and Schiller paid James great tribute, although he claimed to have arrived at his opinions independently. There was, however, an important difference of emphasis between them: James ...
retainedthelabelofhumanism forhisentirephilosophy,stressingthatthe environment, knowledge, and values available to human beings must alwaysbethecreationofhuman choicesandactivities. Schiller’s work remains a fertile source of ideas for the continued advancement of humanism and pragmatism today, as the forty-two