"Our mission is to foster spiritual community where any individual can experience fellowship and acceptance; cultivate a sense of connectedness and responsibility to all creation; and find support in a journey toward spiritual truth."
The Fellowship of Reason is a moral community based in Atlanta. Its founder, Martin L. Cowen III, calls himself a "non-theist", and says that although he does not believe in God or other things supernatural, he nonetheless thinks that churches serve a useful function by providing "moral communities." Wishing to have a moral community that is not theistic (although not officially opposed to theism) he founded that organization.
Fellowship of Reason is also the title of Cowen's book.
The purpose of the organization is to provide a social context, in the form of a moral community, in which individuals interested in personal flourishing, meaning in life, and happiness may find it easier to achieve these through self-improvement in the company of fellow travelers.
The group's philosophical stance has a number of influences, notably Ayn Rand's tenet that "Reason, Purpose, [and] Self-esteem" should be the three highest values guiding human life, Abraham Maslow's writings on self-actualization, Joseph Campbell's study of myth, as well as Aristotle's and the Stoics' ideas regarding eudaimonia as the ultimate aim of life.
The organization calls its stance Eudemonism, and the people who hold this stance are called Eudaemonists.
The organization advocates human relations based on reason and goodwill.
Participants in the Fellowship of Reason® practice CEFLOR: