Author: Lloyd Robertson
Author
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Lloyd Hawkeye Robertson is an Adjunct Professor of Psychology at the University of Regina. His main professional interest has been on the evolution and structure of the self. He has also published on the psychological impacts of Indian residential schools, the use of a community development process to combat youth suicide, the construction of the (North American) aboriginal self, the concept of free will in psychotherapy, and male stigma as it affects men’s identity. He is currently President of the New Enlightenment Project: A Canadian Humanist Initiative.
The magazine Humanist Perspectives has published a special issue on challenges faced by men in contemporary society. These articles presuppose we know what... Read more.
The New Enlightenment Project: A Canadian Humanist Initiative Abstract Although enmity between Arab and Jew did not begin with the United Nations... Read more.
Jerry Coyne, Steven Pinker and Richard Dawkins have independently resigned from the Freedom from Religion Foundation. Their letters of resignation can be... Read more.
This excerpt is from a longer article originally published on the substack “Realities Last Stand.” The author, Dr. Colin Wright is the... Read more.
With the help of a United Nations agency, Nasser Yousefi established a school for children in his native Iran 20 years ago.... Read more.
This article traces the contribution of New Age foodism and “alternative” medicine to a political movement that devalues science, reason and all... Read more.
In this article originally published in the British journal, Humanistically Speaking, the Edan Tasca of the Centre for Inquiry Canada and I... Read more.
In this interview the New Enlightenment Project’s Director of Advocacy Scott Douglas Jacobsen interviews Humanist Chaplain Marty Shoemaker about the need for... Read more.
A conversation between Scott Douglas Jacobsen and Lloyd Hawkeye Robertson about male stigma first published in In-Sight Journal Individual Publication Date: June... Read more.
Edan Tasca, Centre for Inquiry Canada “Then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out—Because I was not a... Read more.