It’s #internationaldogday! So what better way to celebrate than a mega-thread featuring prominent & historic humanists and their canine companions? Let us begin. Here's British philosopher and humanist Bertrand Russell, sharing a lovely moment with his dog.
Einstein was profoundly involved in the humanist movement on both sides of the Atlantic. He also worked with Bertrand Russell to write the Einstein-Russell manifesto which called for peace during the Cold War. It's quite nice to see him here having a break. #internationaldogday
This one comes from our #HumanistHeritage project. Florence Dixie was a war correspondent, suffragist, & traveller who threw off the restraints of Victorian domesticity. She was a humanist, & also had a St Bernard called Hubert. Shout out to Hubert. #Internationaldogday
Can you guess who that is? It's a young Carl Sagan! He would of course go on to become one of the world's most beloved humanists & cosmologists, inspiring generations of budding scientists through his series 'Cosmos'. His childhood dog is pretty neat, too. #internationaldogday
Here's a rather serious (and hilarious) book cover featuring British philosopher and humanist A.J. Ayer and his Jack Russell. Ayer was our President 1965-1970. His talks, lectures, and interviews on philosophy are well worth a watch! #internationaldogday
Ethel Smyth – English composer, humanist, and member of the women's suffrage movement, pictured here with her friend Marco! #HumanistHeritage#internationaldogday
Standing left-right: Jacques Lacan, Cécile Éluard, Pierre Reverdy, Louise Leiris, Pablo Picasso, Zanie de Campan, Valentine Hugo, Simone de Beauvoir, Brassaï. Sitting, left-right: Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, Michel Leiris, Jean Aubier.
The American humanist Kurt Vonnegut once wrote: 'It's a terrible waste to be happy & not notice it'. With that in mind – it would be a terrible waste to not tweet this picture of Kurt, looking very happy next to a tiny dog. #Internationaldogday
We can't forget this picture of our patron @stephenfry looking smart as ever, with this tiny Jack Russel on the beach. This, surely, is a brilliant timeline cleanser if there ever was one. Hooray for #Internationaldogday!
Another patron photo! Sandi Toksvig enjoying the company of this fluffy pup. If you'd like to join Sandi & learn about humanism, you can do it now via our 'Introducing humanism' course. The dog does not feature in it, though. #InternationalDogDayfuturelearn.com/courses/introd…
Honourable mention: Our sorely missed patron Terry Pratchett. Here he is, holding a massive bottle of champagne, in a field, next to a pig called Snuff in promotion of his book of the same name. #Internationalpigday
Juno, @andrewcopson's dog, is quite the celebrity here at Humanists UK. Here she is holding the fort at our London office, campaigning for more treats. She's here to wish you all a very happy #InternationalDogDay!
And perhaps this lovely quote to end on, by Charles Darwin.
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All families should have the right to send their children to their local state school. It's common sense. Schools funded by taxpayers should be open to everyone, regardless of their background. humanists.uk/2024/04/08/hum…
The evidence is clear. This isn't the first attempt by the UK Government to enforce faith-based admissions; they tried in 2018 and failed, thanks to public backlash. Since then, data has consistently shown the negative impacts of faith admissions. humanists.uk/2023/10/12/who…
'Never let the future disturb you. You will meet it, if you have to, with the same weapons of reason which today arm you against the present'. Some good, ancient, and stoic advice – from the Philosopher Emperor, Marcus Aurelius. He died #OnThisDay 180 CE. 🧵
In a book he wrote to himself, known now as 'Meditations', the Roman Emperor wrote that happiness, moral virtue, love, & inner-strength are readily available to all of humanity, & that we need not look outside of ourselves to live a good, moral life.
People who share humanist values are likely to find great value in Stoic philosophy. It's highly practical & focuses on the human need to live ethically. It also focuses on how we can't control all aspects of life, but only our reaction to what happens within our own.
Heart-breaking. Robbed of the human right to education, dignity, and a future – young women are given no alternative but to recite scripture under brutal Taliban rule. But these establishments are not unique to Afghanistan...
While the idea of young people being robbed of a future by religious clerics may seem far away on the other side of the world... this is simply not the case. 6,000 children are currently stuck in illegal schools in England, many of which are religious.
Scripture from dawn till dusk. Unsafe, tumbling down buildings. Widespread abuse. This is the experience of the thousands of children trapped in illegal religious schools... and the UK Government has seemingly abandoned its plans to shut them down.
Extraordinary to watch the mind of the American humanist playwright Lorraine Hansberry at work here in 1960. A true talent and inspiration, Hansberry was the first black woman to have a play produced on Broadway – wonderful to see her passion shine through. #HumanistHeritage
Her most famous play, A Raisin in the Sun (which debuted in 1959), is a fearless commentary on racial discrimination, segregation, and the 'American dream'. It's a fantastic piece of drama, which you can watch in full on YouTube.
Hansberry was good friends with musician Nina Simone, and after Lorraine's death in 1965, Simone went on to write the song 'To Be Young, Gifted and Black' in her memory, subsequently becoming an anthem of the Civil Rights movement. #IWM2023
A wonderful moment caught in a #HumanistHeritage photo! Architect of modern humanism and our first Executive Director, Harold Blackham, appearing to crack wise at his retirement party: (pictured, right, @ConwayHall in 1968). Best of Blackham. 🧵👇
'Nothing is exempt from human question...no immemorial tradition, no revelation, no authority, no privileged knowledge.' – Harold Blackham, the architect of modern humanism & our first Executive Director, on the importance of questioning everything and everyone.
'Humanism is the ordinary way of taking hold of the world...Contrary to what many suspect or complain of, humanism not only has no mumbo-jumbo, it has no experts. Intellectuals and the man in the street speak the same language.'
The UK Government has shelved the #RightsRemovalBill and we hope it does not return. The Bill seeks to alter the #HumanRightsAct in such a way that ordinary people would lose the power to challenge discrimination perpetrated by the state. humanists.uk/2022/09/07/gov…
The #HumanRightsAct gives everyone the power to take legal action against the police (demonstrated by the victims of the rapist John Worboys). The #RightsRemovalBill diminishes this power, & with it, the ability to effectively hold the police to account. theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
The HRA also allows for 'religion' to be interpreted as 'religion or belief.' The non-religious (52% of UK population) can & do challenge discrimination on this basis. The #RightsRemovalBill strips this power of interpretation away, and with it our rights. bihr.org.uk/blog/why-our-h…