Monday, March 4, 2013

Core Values for “Being in Love with Life”



1.  We can immortalise and eternalise ourselves by the excellence of the effortful work we do and the example we set.
2.  We should pursue a free and responsible search for truth in order to know and we find meaning in life. We are invited to ask about each idea, "Is it reasonable and responsible? Does it make sense in terms of what is currently now known?" This is not to suggest that we do not also learn and gain insights from intuition, hunches, flashes of inspiration, even emotion or unexplainable experiences. It’s only that when making important decisions that will affect others and ourselves it befits us to test our perceptions against reality. (NB. The individual elements examined: freedom - nothing ties us to any particular belief or idea until we have discovered it ourselves; responsible - the duty to use sound reason, the results of science or credible research, compassion and intellectual discipline to find answers about life; search - the ongoing quest for that which defines us, individually and collectively, the way to live and to be; the quest for truth - that which speaks to us with the force of reliable facts and reality; and meaning - that which gives us the sense of virtuous purpose and worthy position in life.)
3.  We should gain insight about life from many lives, cultures and teachings for nothing is forever fixed, nothing is precast, and human possibilities are at once unlimited and infinite.
4.   We have the power within ourselves to realise the best we are capable of as human beings. We should therefore find the better self and try to become the best person we can be.   
5.  We should value many deep expressions of the power of human imagination and novelty by appreciating creative arts and performances, e.g. dance and music, drama and theatre, poetry and literature, sculptor, etc. We should realise that creativity is best nurtured in a climate of freedom where innovation is esteemed. This will encourage us to explore and express our own aesthetic and sensual side and to open our hearts and minds to the fullness of life in all its aspects.
6.   We are responsible for what we do and what we can become. “Humanity will learn to face the crises of life in terms of its knowledge of their naturalness and probability. Reasonable and humanly attitudes will be fostered by education and supported by custom.” We should therefore need to emphasize human capabilities, i.e., the capacity to reason; adopt the scientific method to search for truth; and promote the right of all humans to develop their fullest potential.  
7.   We are inter-dependent as human beings and there is an intricate connection of all humanity of which we are a part. We should therefore celebrate and show our affirmation of life in this world by working for the betterment of fellow human beings and nature.
8.   We should nurture the feeling that we have the potential and freedom to experience and enjoy life and explore ideas. We should seek “the way to determine the existence and value of any and all realities is by means of intelligent inquiry” and that “experiences instead of beliefs, must assist in the formulation of hopes and plans in the light of the scientific disposition and method.”
9. We should encourage ourselves to use our minds, to question even the seemingly obvious and to trust and even interrogate our very own instincts, judgements and experiences.
10. We should honour reason and encourage integrity. By ourselves, we should think for ourselves, to explore, challenge, and doubt; to approach the important questions of life with an openness to new ideas and different perspectives; and then to test these ideas against reality, filter new knowledge through our own active mind, and believe according to the evidence.
11.  We are connected to the world, the pulsating rhythms of the cosmos and everything therein. This means our well-being and our very existence is based on our sense of wider relatedness with all the people and the universe. This requires us to work for a sound environment and a humane civilization.

Derived from "The Faith of a Humanist" (1996) and “Reasonable Religion” (2004) by Sarah Oelberg