English Secularism: A Confession of Belief

audiobook

English Secularism: A Confession of Belief

by George Jacob Holyoake

EN·~3 hours·31 chapters

Chapters

31 total
1

ENGLISH SECULARISM - A CONFESSION OF BELIEF

0:02
2

By George Jacob Holyoake - 1896

0:02
3

AUTHOR'S PREFACE.

1:02
4

George Jacob Holyoake. Eastern Lodge, Brighton, England, February, 1896.

2:17
5

PUBLISHER'S PREFACE.

14:48
6

CHAPTER I. OPEN THOUGHT THE FIRST STEP TO INTELLIGENCE

5:25
7

CHAPTER II. THE QUESTION STATED

5:16
8

CHAPTER III. THE FIRST STAGE OF FREE THOUGHT: ITS NATURE AND LIMITATION

10:57
9

CHAPTER IV. THE SECOND STAGE OF FREE THOUGHT: ENTERPRISE

6:58
10

CHAPTER V. CONQUESTS OF INVESTIGATION

7:40

Description

This work offers a clear‑sighted look at the rise of English Secularism, presenting it not as a denial of belief but as a distinct confession of how thought can be organized without the sway of organized religion. Written by a pioneering advocate who helped coin the very term, the author shares his personal conviction that free inquiry must precede any public moral framework, positioning secularism somewhere between traditional theism and outright atheism.

The book unfolds as a series of essays first appearing in a scholarly journal, each probing a different stage of free thought—from its initial questioning to the practical responsibilities that a secular outlook imposes on society. It argues that religion should remain a private matter while public life is guided by reasoned ethics, and it lays out the principles that set secular instruction apart from mere criticism of faith. Listeners will come away with a thoughtful portrait of a movement that reshaped public discourse in Victorian England.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (199K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger

Release date

2011-11-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the author

George Jacob Holyoake

George Jacob Holyoake

1817–1906

A self-educated Victorian reformer, he helped shape modern secular thought and even coined the word "secularism." His long career also reached into journalism, free speech campaigns, and the co-operative movement.

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