E. L. Mayo
From Philosopedia
E. L. Mayo (20th Century)
In the mid-1950s, Mayo was on the faculty of Drake University, where he taught poetry.
Asked in the mid-1950s about humanism, he responded that of the suggested categories of humanism he was "a theistic humanist along with William Blake, Soren Kierkegaard, and Simone Weil." He included a poem dedicated to a fellow theistic humanist, the neo-humanist Irving Babbitt.

