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Pitzer College Adds Secular Studies Program As Part Of Growing Trend

First Posted: 08/ 4/2011 7:34 pm Updated: 10/ 4/2011 6:12 am

Secular Studies
Pitzer College in Claremont, Cal.

By Kimberly Winston
c. 2011 Religion News Service

(RNS) Almost every major college and university offers a degree in religious studies. But secularism? Nary a one -- until now.

Starting this fall, Pitzer College, a small liberal arts school in Southern California, will offer a bachelor's degree in secular studies. The degree is the first of its kind in the United States, according to the Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture at Trinity College.

Though the program is a first, it may not stand alone for long. Scholars say there is a growing interest in secularism -- the rejection of religion in public, and sometimes private, life -- both in the U.S. and around the world.

"We've been studying religious people for years, but there is a huge chunk of humanity who is not religious," said Phil Zuckerman, a sociology professor and founder of the Pitzer program. "Who are they? I would like to study them with the same vigor we study religiosity."

So, it seems, would others:

-- The Humanist Institute, the educational arm of the American Humanist Association, hopes to establish this year the country's first master's program in humanism, a philosophy that substitutes human morality and reasoning for belief in the supernatural.

-- "Secularism and Nonreligion," the first academic journal devoted to the subject, will debut in January.

-- San Diego State University will host a first-of-its-kind international conference in September examining the rise of unbelief in the West.

-- The Society for the Scientific Study of Religion will host a half-dozen sessions dealing with secularism at its October meeting. Ten years ago, there were none.

"There are a number of academics out there looking into this with great interest," said Roy Speckhardt, executive director of the American Humanist Association. "Part of the reason it is growing is we are realizing the demographics it represents is huge and growing and national academia is interested in getting involved."

In 2008, the American Religious Identification Survey found that the percentage of American adults who say they have no religion had nearly doubled since 1990 to 34 million people -- 15 percent of U.S. adults.

More critical for colleges and universities, one-third of Americans under 30 reported they had no religion in 2001, according to another ARIS poll. And the Secular Student Alliance, a campus-based organization of nonreligious college and high school students, has grown from 100 groups in 2008 to 219 in 2010.

"There is just no question that there is a hunger in the U.S. by nonreligious people to express their secularism and know more about it," Zuckerman said.

One factor may be the so-called "New Atheists" movement popularized by the best-selling books of Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens. Characterized by a take-no-prisoners attack on religion, the New Atheists' often strident denunciations of faith have drawn extensive media coverage.

"They made a big noise and are continuing to make a big noise," said Ryan Cragun, a sociologist at the University of Tampa who will co-edit the new journal. "It is now okay to say I am interested in this topic and I want to study it."

The Humanist Institute has long offered a three-year certification in humanism for college graduates. Now, plans and money are in place with Goddard College in Plainfield, Vt., to establish a master's degree, perhaps as early as December.

"It would give a certain level of recognition that would attract a lot more people to the program and raise the stakes on how qualified and functional the folks who complete it are," Speckhardt said.

At Pitzer, students pursuing the new degree will take 10 core courses that examine secularism within the framework of art, literature, politics and science. They will also take religious studies courses. Class titles include "Anxiety in the Age of Reason," "The Secular Life" and "God, Darwin and Design in America."

Kiley Lawrence, a 19-year-old, pre-med student from Kansas, plans to study for the new degree.

"I'm excited to study why people are so quick to relinquish scientific curiosity in favor of `heaven only knows' and also, why a standpoint of skepticism has been so stigmatized over the years," she said.

"I think what I'll get out of it is some greater insight into the workings of religion in society, a greater appreciation for scientific investigation, and how the two relate to each other."

But some academics raise concerns about secular studies programs and degrees.

Barry Kosmin, director of Trinity College's secularism center, which helps educators incorporate secular studies in their curricula, said he prefers to see secularism examined within other fields, like biology, politics and especially religious studies.

They must also avoid any taint of activism, Kosmin said. "The mere mention of the words `secular studies' is enough for some people to turn around and say it is advocacy. What they have to do is have a variety of viewpoints."

Cragun said it will be difficult to interest students in a degree in secular studies. Where would he tell them they could find work?

Zuckerman is aware of the criticism and said "religion-bashing" is not on the syllabus. And secular studies would be "a tolerated stepchild," he said, within another department. "I want to be on equal footing" with other fields of study, he said.

So what will a twentysomething do with a degree in secular studies? That may be beside the point, at least for now.

"It might not get them a job at Google nor even at McDonalds," Kosmin said. "But secularism is necessary for educating the modern mind. It is not a new approach to learning, but it is a new way of looking at the world and I think it might invigorate liberal arts education."

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By Kimberly Winston c. 2011 Religion News Service (RNS) Almost every major college and university offers a degree in religious studies. But secularism? Nary a one -- until now. Starting this...
By Kimberly Winston c. 2011 Religion News Service (RNS) Almost every major college and university offers a degree in religious studies. But secularism? Nary a one -- until now. Starting this...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
profideous man
03:39 PM on 08/10/2011
"Secular studies" seems, to me, to be about every major a university offers OTHER THAN a religious studies major. Are not history, political science, sociology, psychology, law, medicine, languages, film, literature, etc. all "secular studies?" Isn't the definition of that which is secular is any and everything that is not primarily religious in nature? It seems that "secularism" ought to be taught as a subset or concentration within a religious studies or theology program - not an entire major unto itself. I'd be curious to see what the curriculum looks like to fulfill the major requirements.
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Sing Out and Slap Iron
What's that smell?
07:40 PM on 08/09/2011
We're coming, you religionists.
04:59 PM on 08/09/2011
I don't believe in God, and I don't get the point of this degree program.

Isn't everything under the sun, besides theology, a secular study? Doesn't this just give religion greater importance?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Nigel Patel
People who are against government, govern badly
09:09 AM on 08/09/2011
The study of the world that we know without a doubt actually exists.
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Feurio
Religion poisons everything
05:24 PM on 08/08/2011
A secular world is a sane world
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXzladhscMQ
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quorthon
Big government IS the answer!
03:34 PM on 08/08/2011
Makes sense, since secularists (those committed to secular ideals) have come to form a distinct bloc--partly out of response to the encroachment of fundamentalism--with its own history, cultural references, jargon, etc. Should sit nicely as a minor, along with Women's, GLBT, African-American, etc. studies to complement whatever one's major of study may happen to be.
01:37 PM on 08/07/2011
Christians make great followers. Sheep. Baaa. Duh.
12:49 PM on 08/07/2011
"Almost every major college and university offers a degree in religious studies. But secularism? Nary a one -- until now."

When I was in university I'm pretty sure secular studies was the entire course catalog except for religion courses. Or, in a more narrow scope, 'philosophy'.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bessielil
trying to organize hummingbirds
06:10 PM on 08/05/2011
What a great idea for a field of study. Colleges are not just job training institutions.

Why wouldn't this degree provide as much history, critical thinking, ethnology, insight into people as any other social science degree.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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KellyRyan
A micro-bio for one who has none.
11:47 PM on 08/08/2011
Agreed ... hope to see those who learn and subsequently teach.
04:16 PM on 08/05/2011
Theists versus atheists. Between them destroying the planet and arguing pointlessly.

Nature-worshipping pantheists look on in wide-eyed amazement. How can so many be so vain, so stupid?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zilo
Independent/Republicans hate freedom
05:29 PM on 08/06/2011
My, my..you have the superiority complex that many religious folks have. How is that helpful to this discussion?
05:46 PM on 08/06/2011
There you go. Great at giving it out. But say one thing back - can't take it. Go back to your squabbling.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AdamWest1313
Hardcore Agnostic
04:11 PM on 08/08/2011
...You do realize that pantheists ARE theists, right?
04:22 PM on 08/08/2011
In some usages, not all. Shelley and Romantic poets of his circle were atheistic pantheists. Wordsworth later tended to theistic pantheism. See Robertson, History of Freethought in 2 volumes. Cheers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Hallmark
03:35 PM on 08/05/2011
yes, then we can join the on-campus non-stamp collecting special interest club
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
freducate
Spirit Naturally Evolving
11:55 AM on 08/09/2011
Heh. Not before dying your hair bald, you can't.

It's gotta be tough being an old-school atheist and watching the turf slip out from under you. Doesn't matter how often you toss out the standard lines about atheism not meaning this or only meaning that, because no matter how correct they might be, the gnu-atheist push has changed the landscape. Like it or not, their aggressive anti-theism has munged the meanings and nuance is off the board.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Michael Hallmark
12:16 PM on 08/09/2011
Good. It's about time.

Stupid superstition has had a free pass long enough.
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michelesda
My micro-bio is empty.
02:36 PM on 08/05/2011
Damn, it's about time.
12:45 PM on 08/05/2011
Brand new major coming in at Pitzer college. Long Term Unemployment for Dummies. Benefits include a lifetime of debt, food stamps, Medicaid, and all the generosity at the local food pantry.
01:01 PM on 08/05/2011
Your flippant attitude to the pursuit of knowledge is disturbing. College grads that majored in a social science are just as capable of doing any job as a kid that majored in business. You think History majors can't figure out things like Word, Excel, Spreadsheets, etc? Give me a break.
01:51 PM on 08/05/2011
"Your flippant attitude to the pursuit of knowledge is disturbing­."

Really, when did I say that? I am just not interested in spending $200K+ for it. Want to learn/publish something about secularism? Read a book, join a think tank, or start an organization. Colleges do not need to extort vast sums of money from naive students/the taxpayer to do it.

"College grads that majored in a social science are just as capable of doing any job as a kid that majored in business."

Grads in the social sciences MAY be capable of doing various jobs but their majors add little to those skill sets and this economy improving on skills that employers want/need is most critical. It is all fun and games until Aunt Sallie Mae comes knocking.

"You think History majors can't figure out things like Word, Excel, Spreadshee­ts, etc? Give me a break. "

And do you seriously believe that is all there is to know to get a job in finance/accounting? MS Office? Besides business/MBA/accounting is hardly a secure profession these days, I was thinking more along the lines of engineering, medicine, etc.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fjg
a jolly good fellow
11:06 PM on 08/05/2011
Hilarious!!!
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Franklin1776
Micro-bio rocks! So does Cell-bio!
12:39 PM on 08/05/2011
You simply cannot have freedom for all if "god" is only for some. It's about time. Secularism is great. It's why we are not Iran.
12:46 PM on 08/05/2011
Yes secularism is great. But why do I need to spend 200K+ to learn what I already know?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
LadyAurora
Pagan for Peace
03:36 PM on 08/05/2011
No one is forcing you to take the course are they?

So stop bitchin and let anyone who is interested take the course.

Or are you against eduation unless it's specifically training?
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
11:47 AM on 08/05/2011
Interestingly there's a conservative think tank in the same city where this college is-The Rose Institiute.