Abstract

This article examines the formation of British Secularist ethics in the middle decades of the nineteenth century. The Secularist movement, initiated by George Jacob Holyoake in 1851, was a primarily artisan working-class social movement that sought to ground social ethics upon a rational, scientific, and non-theological foundation. This article examines how the quest for a science of morals informed Secularist expectations and judgements. In this article, I trace how the idea of a rational science of ethics was integrated into the secularist movement. I begin by briefly situating the Secularist movement within the wider moral and epistemological debates of the mid-Victorian period. I address the implications that atheism had on the development of Secularism, and on its contemporary reputation and respectability. I then examine how Holyoake sought to establish the non-theological grounds of morality and the tensions that arose from debates between Secularists regarding the necessity of atheism to Secularism. Finally, I argue that despite significant fissures within the movement created by the question of the necessity of atheism, Secularism nevertheless evinced a high degree of conceptual unity concerning the nature and grounds of morality.

Highlights

  • This article examines the formation of British Secularist ethics in the middle decades of the nineteenth century

  • I examine how Holyoake sought to establish the nontheological grounds of morality and the tensions that arose from debates between secularists regarding the necessity of atheism to Secularism

  • In the National Reformer we find the idea that the “obligation” of faith in providence was predicated on the a priori belief that “the will of God best indicated what is conducive to goodness and happiness in mankind.”

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Summary

Introduction

This article examines the formation of British Secularist ethics in the middle decades of the nineteenth century. Holyoake intended Secularism to be a positive expression of freethought that transcended atheism, and could provide both atheist and believer with an ethical system independent of scripture and theology.

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