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Humanism is a great deal more than an attitude toward art and letters. It has a sociology as important as its psychology. Aristotle's social animal is permitted by the humanist to have a safe refuge, the "Civitas Del, so dear to the Middle Ages, from the potential tyranny of his incorporated fellow animals, the State. A monism which can find nothing outside of that unity of which the social group is an essential part can find no sphere outside of which the State is not supreme. Hence, says your good humanist, intense nationalism...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Crimson Bookshelf | 10/23/1933 | See Source »

Died. Irving Babbitt, 67, famed Humanist, professor of French & Comparative Literature at Harvard; after long illness; in Cambridge, Mass. Hating modernism, romanticism, the "Machine Age," he went back to the Greek and Roman classics for an austere doctrine which, with Princeton's Paul Elmer More, he fervently preached. In his lectures he loved to excoriate Jean Jacques Rousseau, No. 1 French romanticist; two years ago his students ran lotteries based on the number of writers Professor Babbitt mentioned in a 60-min. lecture (TIME, March...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Jul. 24, 1933 | 7/24/1933 | See Source »

...universe is self-existing, not created. ¶ Man is part of nature, product of his culture, his environment, his social heritage. The traditional dualism of mind and body must be rejected. ¶ Humanism also rejects cosmic and supernatural "guarantees." The Humanist eschews theism, deism, modernism, "new thought'' and instead of feeling religious emotions concentrates on human life-la- bor, art, science, philosophy, love, friendship, recreation. ¶Humanism is for "a socialized and co-operative economic order-a shared life in a shared world." Its adherents say that it will: "Affirm life rather than deny it ... seek to elicit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Humanism on Paper | 5/15/1933 | See Source »

...Century, it is old enough to have been called by Harvard's late great President Charles William Eliot "the most significant movement in American education today." To carry it forward was founded, in 1919, the Progressive Education Association, which now has some 7,000 members. The philosophy of Humanist John Dewey and the work of pioneering Colonel Francis Wayland Parker (1831-1902) of Quincy, Mass. and Cook County, Ill. are implicit in much Progressive teaching. That education at any age should grow out of free individual experience rather than from books is a Progressive fundamental. Because parents who send...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: In Hessian Hills | 12/19/1932 | See Source »

...Objectives' is the most interesting. Mr. James W. Fessler's 'Eliot and Lowell' is a survey of well-known developments in Harvard since 1869 without much critical examination of the problem which he suggests, the special needs of the more mature and interested students. Mr. Norton E. Long's 'Humanist Critique of Harvard' defends the thesis that undergraduates should be required to concentrate in 'something central' that is to say, humanistic, Mr. Edward M. Barnet's 'Utopia on Golden Crutches' is rather trife and ineffective...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: JOURNAL WILL APPEAR TODAY FOR FIRST TIME | 12/15/1932 | See Source »

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