I came across this NPR blog entry where they cited a study that said 8.2% of Americans do not believe in God, or any other higher power or cosmic force, which struck me because I had always heard it was closer to 3-4% or so.
I skimmed through the study but couldn’t find the reference for that number. Percent with no official religious affiliation (though not necessarily atheist) is 10.8%. Of that group, 37.1% don’t believe in a higher power, making that number around 4% of the total. Later, they give the atheist percent at 5.2%. How is that? Because some people with an affiliation with a religion are atheists! 8.3% of Jewish people and 1.3% of catholics are atheists. Also, only 38.7% of atheists never pray.
There are all sorts of interesting correlations.
- Those who attend church more are much more likely to support the Patriot Act, and believe that Hussein was behind the 9/11 attacks.
- The belief that God favors the United States is the single strongest predictor of whether an individual trusts Bush, approves of the Patriot Act, thinks Hussein was involved in 9/11, and approves of the Iraq War.
- As church attendance increases, the likelihood of having read The Da Vinci Code significantly decreases
- Females are significantly more likely to report all paranormal experiences with the exception of UFO sightings.1
- Education explains little of the variation in paranormal experiences. Respondents with a high school degree or less are less likely than respondents with at least some college to have witnessed a UFO or used alternative medicines or therapies, but differences for the other paranormal experiences are not statistically significant.
- Belief in the paranormal declines with increasing church attendance. People who attend infrequently (less than once a month) demonstrate greater belief in the paranormal (mean=28.88) than those who attend on a semi-weekly basis (mean=27.95). People who attend at least once a week are the least likely to believe in paranormal topics (mean=24.68)
People are interesting.
1 So, apparently, Mars doesn’t need women. Or, possibly, they got them, leaving the men behind to report it.
Why are people who don’t believe in the paranormal going to church? The free donuts?
And why are the atheists praying?
Pick a side, people! The Flying Spaghetti Monster does not condone wishy-washyness!
I think a praying atheist is pretty much just talking to himself.
Ssshhh. Don’t bother me. I’m praying about where I left my keys. They were right here a second ago…
apparently, Mars doesn’t need women.
Darn.
I’m sure they’ll make an exception for you.
I can see how a Jewish person could say they’re athiest (I know plenty of people who identify themselves as “ethnic” Jews, but not religiously so.) But how could you be Catholic and athiest? They really do feel guilty, don’t they?
Maybe there’s an “ethnic” Catholic population we just don’t know about.
My guess, Italian.
Some people who are atheists may be non-theists. I guess I’m a Christian non-theist, just to add to the muddle. And I applied to go to Mars, but they said they don’t take redheaded non-theists. Glad I stayed here; the food is much better.
From Wikipedia, nontheist entry…
A nontheist, by definition, views the question [of God’s existence] to be necessarily irrelevant, and also may or may not find it necessarily unanswerable.
From the same entry…
It is used somewhat differently by certain liberal theologians — such as Episcopal bishop John Shelby Spong and Anglican bishop John A.T. Robinson — who define a “nontheistic God” as “the ground of all being” rather than as a personal divine being.
Which sense are you referring to when you say Christian non-theist? I can get my mind around the second meaning in that context, but not-so-much the first.
happy to discuss this with you, if you say who you are
For all I know, you might be some enraged minor deity out to prove me a fool.
Sorry, that was me. Sometimes I forget to log in.
No, scratch that. I don’t believe in logging in.
Personal Pan Jesus
Actually I thought that might be you, but on the off chance that you were the easily-angered Cthulhu, I didn’t want to incur your wrath.
‘”nontheistic God” as “the ground of all being” rather than as a personal divine being.’
I consider myself a Spong-stylin’ nontheist, in the fine Baptist/Methodist/Unitarian/Marxist Atheist/Episcopalian/Maybe back to Methodism tradition of my self. I just appreciate the way he ‘splains it above. It’s not really for me to say whether or not there is a theistic-style deity hanging around somewhere — but I don’t buy into it for myself.
Re: Personal Pan Jesus
Cthulhu is well pleased.
But the survey takers are pissed at you for skewing their results.
People are interesting.
Yeah they are.
The lack of belief in paranormal among church goers makes sense to me because the more conservative such people are, the more likely they are to believe that UFO-sightings, fortune tellers and so on are “satanic” (you run into those fun types a lot working at the Renaissance Festival). They also believe space-exploration is a waste of time because the Bible (according to their interpretation) indicates that this is the only planet with life on it, and Jesus is going to come and destroy this one soon, so what’s the point?
On the other hand, people with a college degree are probably more likely to believe that sheer odds support the existence of some kind of life on other planets.
The one that really cracked me up though was:
As church attendance increases, the likelihood of having read The Da Vinci Code significantly decreases
“Don’t you read that book! Don’t read it! Don’t even look at it! If I see you going in to that theatre you’re going to be excommunicated!” — great publicity for a fun, but average read. 😉