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Poll shows atheism on the rise in the U.S.

(RNS) Religiosity is on the decline in the U.S. and atheism is on the rise, according to a new worldwide poll.

The poll, called "The Global Index of Religiosity and Atheism," found that the number of Americans who say they are "religious" dropped from 73 percent in 2005 (the last time the poll was conducted) to 60 percent.

At the same time, the number of Americans who say they are atheists rose, from 1 percent to 5 percent.

The poll was conducted by WIN-Gallup International and is based on interviews with 50,000 people from 57 countries and five continents. Participants were asked, "Irrespective of whether you attend a place of worship or not, would you say you are a religious person, not a religious person, or a convinced atheist?"

The seven years between the polls is notable because 2005 saw the publication of "The End of Faith" by Sam Harris, the first in a wave of best-selling books on atheism by Christopher Hitchens, Richard Dawkins, Daniel Dennett and other so-called "New Atheists."

"The obvious implication is that this is a manifestation of the New Atheism movement," said Ryan Cragun, a University of Tampa sociologist of religion who studies American and global atheism.

Still, Cragun does not believe the poll shows more people are becoming atheists, but rather that more people are willing to identify as atheists.

"For a very long time, religiosity has been a central characteristic of the American identity," he said. "But what this suggests is that is changing and people are feeling less inclined to identify as religious to comply with what it means to be a good person in the U.S."

Another possible factor may be the number of atheists within organized efforts by American atheist groups to encourage those who do not believe in God to say so publicly. The Out Campaign, a project of the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science, was launched in 2007 and has since been endorsed by several national atheist groups.

The current poll confirms a declining religiosity -- both at home and abroad -- that's been detected in other polls. The 2008 American Religious Identification Survey found that 15 percent of Americans said they have no religion -- different from being a "confirmed atheist," but nonetheless up from 8 percent in 1990.

Barry Kosmin, the principal investigator for the ARIS report, said he's skeptical of the new study.

"The U.S. trends are what we have found and would expect, but the actual numbers are peculiar to say the least," he said. "The drops in religiosity seem too sharp for the time period -- people just don't change their beliefs that quickly. Most of the trend away from religion has demographic causes and demography moves 'glacially.'"

Specifically, he points to the poll's finding that Vietnam, while showing a sharp 23 percent drop in religiosity since 2005, also shows no atheists. "Eight million Communist Party members but zero atheists?" he said. "That statistic makes me very doubtful of the accuracy of the survey overall and some of the international comparisons."

Other findings from the poll include:

  • Besides Vietnam, Ireland had the greatest change in religiosity, down from 69 percent to 47 percent.
  • China has the most "convinced atheists," at 47 percent, followed by Japan (31 percent), Czech Republic (30 percent) and France (29 percent)
  • The most religious countries are in Africa (Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya), South America (Brazil, Peru) and Eastern Europe (Macedonia, Romania, Armenia)
  • Countries with the same percentage of atheists as the U.S. are Poland, Moldova and Saudi Arabia.

Topics: Faith, Doctrine & Practice
Beliefs: Freethought (Atheist, Humanist, Agnostic)
Tags: atheism, global index of religiosity and atheism, poll

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Comments

  1. I actually took the time to read the referenced poll and concluded it to be very thorough (even exhaustive) as evidenced by the many charts and graphs.  However, I would like to have seen a more detailed definition of the nebulous term “religiosity.”  In this case, it appears to mean belief in a Christian God, which of course is one type of monotheism.  Perhaps then the poll could have yielded more specific information as to the increase or decrease in Christianity and atheism, which is the point of the essay.  As an aside, my research on this yielded the existence of something I’ve never heard of before:  Christian atheists.

    But I digress.  There are two other categories, or perhaps subcategories, of belief systems that bear attention:  “Spiritual, but not religious” as defined by Robert C. Fuller on Beliefnet.com, and “Agnostic”  as described by an article titled “Agnostics and Agnosticism;  Uncertainty about whether God exists” on ReligiousTolerance.org, a website sponsored by the multifaith group Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance.

    According to Robert C. Fuller, nearly one in five people (19%) say they are in the “spiritual, but not religious category.”  They compose a personalized faith based on their observations and experiences in life.  They may also add pieces of alternative religious philosophies.  They reject the public realms of organized religion such as church membership, creeds, and rituals. 

    The ReligiousTolerance.org article defines agnostics as those who “don’t have a yes or no answer as to whether a deity or deities exist.”  They comprise approximately 10% of the polled participants.  Agnostics may also be part of the “spiritual, but not religious” group.  In my own estimation, churches are probably full of agnostics of this definition.  It is not a bad thing; they are looking for answers.

    To my point, although the referenced “Global Index Poll of Religiosity and Atheism” covered alot of ground, even more useful information might have been gleaned by an explicit definition of the term “religiosity”, and inclusion of the “spiritual, but not religious” and “agnostic” groups.  These two groups are probably (my own opinion) increasing in number, thus explaining the sharp decrease in religiosity not affected by the higher incidence of self-reporting atheists.

    Sorry for the long post.

  2. You bring up a good point by mentioning the “spiritual but not religious folks,” and by creating this conversation in general – you’ve just given me an idea for this week’s “Viewpoints” post. Stay tuned.

    – The Editor

  3. This week’s Viewpoints post tackles this topic:

    http://columbiafavs.com/blogs/viewpoints/VIEWPOINTS-Why-the-rise-in-atheism-and-other-paths

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