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Secular Humanism, as stated, 20th c.-presentvs.Universal Declaration of Human Rights, as stated, 1948

Proximity: Same family

15 on a scale of 0 (close) to 100 (far). Closer than 99.2% of all pairs.

These are profiles of the same family, a difference of 15 on the 0 to 100 scale. They differ little in what they value and in the rules they hold. 8 differ in degree rather than direction and on a single dimension one profile engages a question the other sets aside. The sharpest split is Sanctity & Transcendence: Secular Humanism strongly opposes where Universal Declaration of Human Rights is indifferent. Both hold Liberty and Assigned Groups as core commitments.


Clusters

Secular HumanismLiberty First

Liberty is the defining elevation, with Consent & Anti-Coercion running high beside it; Authority & Hierarchy sits low. Individual freedom leads the profile rather than any collective commitment.

Universal Declaration of Human RightsEgalitarian Pluralists

Equality and Inclusiveness & Pluralism rise together at the top of the profile, with Assigned Groups low. Standing is extended broadly rather than allocated by role or origin.


Where they sit


Full detail

Core oppositionCore support
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*V
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P
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*P

* Not counted in the distance: one side is not scored on this dimension.


Where the gaps are

Secular Humanism, as stated, 20th c.-present leadsUniversal Declaration of Human Rights, as stated, 1948 leads
V
P
V
V
V
P
P
P
P
V

10 dimensions identical; 2 not compared.