[填空题]
"Humanism" has used to mean too many things to be a very satisfactory
term. 57. Nevertheless, and in the lack of a better word, 58. I
shall use it here to explain for the complex of attitudes which this discussion
has undertaken to defend.
59. In this sense a humanist is
anyone who rejects the attempt to describe or account of man wholly on the basis
of physics, chemistry, and animal behavior. 60. He is anyone who believes
that will, reason, and purpose are real and significant: that value and justice,
are aspects of a reality called good and evil and rests upon some foundation
other than custom; 61. that consciousness is so far from a mere
epiphenomenon that it is the most tremendous of actualities; 62. that the
unmeasured may be significant; or, to sum it all up, 63. that those human
realities which sometimes seem to exist only in human mind are the perceptions
of the mind.
64. He is