150 episodes

The Humanist Hour (HH) Audio Podcast is a monthly one-hour talk show produced by the American Humanist Association. Every episode of the HH Audio Podcast explores a different area of humanist thought, from politics to pop culture.

The Humanist Hour Unknown

    • Science
    • 4.4 • 111 Ratings

The Humanist Hour (HH) Audio Podcast is a monthly one-hour talk show produced by the American Humanist Association. Every episode of the HH Audio Podcast explores a different area of humanist thought, from politics to pop culture.

    The Humanist Hour #218: Vickie Stangl on Etta Semple

    The Humanist Hour #218: Vickie Stangl on Etta Semple

    We act sometimes as though we think women are new to the freethought movement, to atheist and humanist leadership. We're not. We've been here all along, and we've never gone away. Our history has just sat in boxes, disregarded where it hasn't been thrown away altogether. Our stories have gone untold.

    This week's guest, Vickie Stangl, did something about that. In her book, Etta Semple: Kansas Freethinker and "Ideal" Woman, she took that history out of the archives and made it live. Etta Semple was the founder of the Kansas Freethought Association and a leader of both that organization and the American Secular Union. She started the Freethought Idea newspaper to challenge the ideas of a nation and managed to do it so successfully that she received death threats and a probable attempt on her life.

    Semple is far too interesting to be lost to history. This week, Vickie Stangl joins Peggy Knudtson to talk about the book and about what we need to know to protect Semple's legacy.

    The Humanist Hour #217: Vic Wang and Benita Malone on Humanists of Houston

    The Humanist Hour #217: Vic Wang and Benita Malone on Humanists of Houston

    The Humanists of Houston are American Humanist Association's largest local chapter and they're on pace to become the largest secular movement Meetup group very shortly. They've achieved that growth largely through reaching out to groups that we don't often see at humanist meetings, through executing strategies that some people try to tell us will drive people away.

    This week, Vic Wang, president of Humanists of Houston, and Benita Malone, volunteer coordinator, join the Humanist Hour to talk about embracing diversity and social justice, making meetings and volunteer opportunities welcoming to younger members, implementing a code of conduct, and adopting a transparency that's radical for local groups.

    The Humanist Hour #216: Susan Jacoby on "Strange Gods: A Secular History of Conversion"

    The Humanist Hour #216: Susan Jacoby on "Strange Gods: A Secular History of Conversion"

    We tend to think of the process of converting from one religion to another as a religious experience, but how much of that reflects the outlook of the people who usually talk about conversion? When author Susan Jacoby set out to explore conversion from the perspective of an atheist, she found, by contrast, that many if not most religious conversions are undertaken for frankly pragmatic reasons. From politics to position in society, she details many of the reasons people convert in her latest book, Strange Gods: A Secular History of Conversion.

    This week, she joins Peggy Knudtson to talk about the book and what the current political season tells us about the influence of religion on the hearts, minds, and ballots of Americans.

    The Humanist Hour #215: What Humanists Can Bring to Interfaith Dialogue?

    The Humanist Hour #215: What Humanists Can Bring to Interfaith Dialogue?

    "Interfaith" is not a word that comes easily to all humanists. Even more difficult for some is the idea of partnering with religious leaders and believers to work together on the world's problems. However, a panel composed of humanist minister Rebecca Armstrong, past American Humanist Association president Mel Lipman, former AHA board member Paula Rochelle, and former AHA regional coordinator Ben Wade came together at the AHA's national conference in Chicago this past May to argue that we should. They tell us that interfaith work is both an opportunity and responsibility that at least some humanists should pick up.

    This podcast features audio from that panel presentation.

    The Humanist Hour #214: Annie Laurie Gaylor on Anne Nicol Gaylor and FFRF

    The Humanist Hour #214: Annie Laurie Gaylor on Anne Nicol Gaylor and FFRF

    If anyone in today's secular movement should require no introduction, it's Annie Laurie Gaylor, co-founder and now co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF). Fresh off a speech this past weekend at the Women in Secularism conference about her mother, Anne Nicol Gaylor, Annie Laurie joins us to talk more about her mother's accomplishments. She talks to us about how feminism requires secularism and how FFRF is carrying on Anne Nicol's outspoken legacy.

    The Humanist Hour #213: Growing Up Humanist

    The Humanist Hour #213: Growing Up Humanist

    Today's adolescent humanists in the U.S. aren't the first generation of young people to be raised in a nonreligious philosophy. They are, however, the largest in modern times here – and the demographic shift means the generations that follow will likely be even larger. That means it's time for us to pay attention to the challenges and opportunities faced by teenaged humanists.

    At the American Humanist Association's annual conference in Chicago this past May, the AHA convened a panel of familiar names. At least the last names of the panelists were familiar. This was a new set of humanists, however, the teen-aged children of humanist leaders and other longtime humanists. They came together to discuss the challenges of being a minority among their religious peers, charting their own paths, and finding ways to live up to their humanitarian ideals. We're sharing audio from that panel this week.

Customer Reviews

4.4 out of 5
111 Ratings

111 Ratings

jubei_jc ,

Need New Episodes

The subjects presented are great and stretch a diversity of topics.

Main Question: Why haven't new episodes been posted since December 2016? I can only find the latest episodes on the website. Also, some old episodes don't play. Why is this?

freebirdgirl1970 ,

Where did you go?

I just found this podcast recently and listened to an episode from 2017. I see no more episodes published since November 2017. Have you completely stopped publishing?

FFJohnnie ,

Missing Bo Bennett

This show used to me spot on amazing. Then Bo left, and so have I.

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