Secularism is the principle of separation of government
institutions, and the persons mandated to represent the State, from religious
institutions and religious dignitaries. In one sense, secularism may assert the
right to be free from religious rule and teachings, and the right to freedom
from governmental imposition of religion upon the people within a state that is
neutral on matters of belief. (See also separation of church and state and
Laïcité.) In another sense, it refers to the view that human activities and
decisions, especially political ones, should be unbiased by religious
influence.Some scholars are now arguing that the very idea of secularism will
change.
Secularism draws its intellectual roots from Greek and
Roman philosophers such as Marcus Aurelius and Epicurus; medieval Muslim
polymaths such as Ibn Rushd; Enlightenment thinkers such as Denis Diderot,
Voltaire, Baruch Spinoza, John Locke, James Madison, Thomas Jefferson, and
Thomas Paine; and more recent freethinkers, agnostics, and atheists such as
Robert Ingersoll and Bertrand Russell.
The purposes and arguments in support of secularism vary
widely. In European laicism, it has been argued that secularism is a movement
toward modernization, and away from traditional religious values (also known as
secularization). This type of secularism, on a social or philosophical level,
has often occurred while maintaining an official state church or other state
support of religion. In the United States, some argue that state secularism has
served to a greater extent to protect religion and the religious from
governmental interference, while secularism on a social level is less
prevalent. Within countries as well, differing political movements support
secularism for varying reasons.
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