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In Atheists We Distrust

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sreekimpact

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Atheists are one of the most disliked groups in America. Only 45 percent of Americans say they would vote for a qualified atheist presidential candidate, and atheists are rated as the least desirable group for a potential son-in-law or daughter-in-law to belong to. Will Gervais at the University of British Columbia recently published a set of studies looking at why atheists are so disliked. His conclusion: It comes down to trust.
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Gervais and his colleagues presented participants with a story about a person who accidentally hits a parked car and then fails to leave behind valid insurance information for the other driver. Participants were asked to choose the probability that the person in question was a Christian, a Muslim, a rapist, or an atheist. They thought it equally probable the culprit was an atheist or a rapist, and unlikely the person was a Muslim or Christian. In a different study, Gervais looked at how atheism influences people’s hiring decisions. People were asked to choose between an atheist or a religious candidate for a job requiring either a high or low degree of trust. For the high-trust job of daycare worker, people were more likely to prefer the religious candidate. For the job of waitress, which requires less trust, the atheists fared much better.

It wasn’t just the highly religious participants who expressed a distrust of atheists. People identifying themselves as having no religious affiliation held similar opinions. Gervais and his colleagues discovered that people distrust atheists because of the belief that people behave better when they think that God is watching over them. This belief may have some truth to it. Gervais and his colleague Ara Norenzayan have found that reminding people about God’s presence has the same effect as telling people they are being watched by others: it increases their feelings of self-consciousness and leads them to behave in more socially acceptable ways.

When we know that somebody believes in the possibility of divine punishment, we seem to assume they are less likely to do something unethical. Based on this logic, Gervais and Norenzayan hypothesized that reminding people about the existence of secular authority figures, such as policemen and judges, might alleviate people’s prejudice towards atheists. In one study, they had people watch either a travel video or a video of a police chief giving an end-of-the-year report. They then asked participants how much they agreed with certain statements about atheists (e.g., “I would be uncomfortable with an atheist teaching my child.”) In addition, they measured participants’ prejudice towards other groups, including Muslims and Jewish people. Their results showed that viewing the video of the police chief resulted in less distrust towards atheists. However, it had no effect on people’s prejudice towards other groups. From a psychological standpoint, God and secular authority figures may be somewhat interchangeable. The existence of either helps us feel more trusting of others.

Gervais and Norenzayan’s findings may shed light on an interesting puzzle: why acceptance towards atheism has grown rapidly in some countries but not others. In many Scandinavian countries, including Norway and Sweden, the number of people who report believing in God has reached an all-time low. This may have something to do with the way these countries have established governments that guarantee a high level of social security for all of their citizens. Aaron Kay and his colleagues ran a study in Canada which found that political insecurity may push us towards believing in God. They gave participants two versions of a fictitious news story: one describing Canada’s current political situation as stable, the other describing it as potentially unstable. After reading one of the two articles, people’s beliefs in God were measured. People who read the article describing the government as potentially unstable were more likely to agree that God, or some other type of nonhuman entity, is in control of the universe. A common belief in the divine may help people feel more secure. Yet when security is achieved by more secular means, it may remove some of the draw of faith.

The findings on why we distrust atheists also point towards another potential way of reducing such prejudice: by reminding people of charitable and altruistic acts committed in the name of atheism. In recent years, there has been a growing number of virtual communities dedicated to those interested in atheism. Some of these communities have begun to organize charitable efforts. For example, the Haiti earthquake led members of Richard Dawkins’ foundation to launch a campaign entitled Non-Believers Giving Aid. In December the Reddit.com online atheism community managed to raise over $200,000 worth of donations for Doctors Without Borders. It is possible that greater public awareness of altruistic atheists may help alleviate some of the distrust that many Americans feel towards nonbelievers.
 
ihave found that atheists dont tend to be non religious on logical bases, but because of the way the world is going technological and materialistic
 
ihave found that atheists dont tend to be non religious on logical bases, but because of the way the world is going technological and materialistic

yep dear as much as development and tech is coming in world more and more people start believing in atheism
 
Interesting fact: Americans tend to be more religious-minded than Europeans :lol:

Ironic eh?
 
atheism is a rising power they are making nearly every past war due to religion making the belief of man bad. this might become dangerous as who knows after a few decade an atheist country suddenly makes law that all who follow religion are heretics and a threat to peace and would not be allowed visa
 
atheism is a rising power they are making nearly every past war due to religion making the belief of man bad. this might become dangerous as who knows after a few decade an atheist country suddenly makes law that all who follow religion are heretics and a threat to peace and would not be allowed visa

Have you considered the fact that maybe
1) We are sick of a 'angry sky daddy' controlling our lives through the imaginary fairy tales concocted by a few of his/her/it's followers to control the many?
2) Technological advances have helped in improving our lives, while blind faith has moved it backward.
3) And more and more people are not becoming atheists, they're iffy about their choice and end up in the gray area between atheism and theism -> agnosticism. Some of the more intelligent ones become deists.

And I hope the day comes that all countries ban the display of anything religious in public (what goes inside a person's private quarters is his/her own business).

Interesting fact: Americans tend to be more religious-minded than Europeans :lol:

Ironic eh?

Kazakhstan has a higher percentage of it's population believing in macro-evolution than the U.S does. Kazakhfreakinstan!
 
Someone said God is the external projection of our unconscious mind (the Self), as opposed to our conscious mind (ego)
 
Posting some comments on this article from " scientific american"

"What a horribly written article! When I first saw the headline, I thought there would be some evidence that given a particular situation an atheist would behave in a less ethical way than a believer. There was none. The article implies that "there may be some truth" that people behave better if they believe God is watching over them. However, the evidence presented just shows that people behave better if they believe that someone is watching them. If this were truly the case, the number of believers of any religion that believe in an all-seeing God would have a lower percentage of inmates in prison compared to the percentage of believers in the general population and non-believers would have a higher percentage compared to their general population. And, in fact, it is just the opposite. I am disappointed that Scientific American would publish this article in that way because there are some interesting issues raised in the last few paragraphs. Its almost like Scientific American borrowed the National Enquirer headline writers."

"The theory is great. You're being watch by a supernatural judge, so you don't misbehave. The facts are different, however. Religious people behave no better than others--perhaps a little worse. The pious front they put on is only a front; underneath they are like everyone else. And we're not just talking about the big public cases of scandal and hypocrisy. You see it in everyday life."
 
There is a lot of difference between being religious and being a fanatic.
No religion preaches hate, violance and non tolarance, it's a way of life, a line one could follow to archive peace.
I personally think Atheist are people who are too lazy or people who follow other people coz of some stupid style statement.
 
There is a lot of difference between being religious and being a fanatic.
No religion preaches hate, violance and non tolarance, it's a way of life, a line one could follow to archive peace.
I personally think Atheist are people who are too lazy or people who follow other people coz of some stupid style statement.

Too lazy? To do what? To say the gayatri mantra? To do salaat? To go to church? Hardly. I believe that religion is a vice that provides the illusion of eternal happiness either
a) if you do good to others, else you go to hell (which is bullshit, a man does not need the threat of hell nor the desire for heaven to do good for others)
OR
b) if your faith is propagated endlessly and more people join the fold, and it doesn't help that even if the religion was created with the 'right purpose in mind', men have twisted it's words to serve their own purpose by projecting people of other faiths as 'the enemy'
 
There is a lot of difference between being religious and being a fanatic.
No religion preaches hate, violance and non tolarance, it's a way of life, a line one could follow to archive peace.
I personally think Atheist are people who are too lazy or people who follow other people coz of some stupid style statement.

There are dozens of religions in the world how do you know no religion preaches hate?
Or is it one of your beliefs?
 
yep dear as much as development and tech is coming in world more and more people start believing in atheism

For once in my life time,i saw a good and true sentence by u!!!!


As technology grows,people will tend to come out of Religious delusions and practices created by humans some centuries back,which was meant to divide people.... and will beleive in logical thinking and technology and science....

Some invisible god doesn't make ur life easy,only Science and technology does...

Religions only divide people....
 
Interesting fact: Americans tend to be more religious-minded than Europeans :lol:

Ironic eh?
Indeed.
It is a long time USA are more conservative and religious people than in Europe.
Even between the two wars, Europe having the nationalisms which were not at all based on religious beliefs but taking distance for most of them. Well i guess it depends which state in USA too.
 
Atheists don't kill or hurt others in the name of their atheism. But there have been instances where traditional religion was abolished to bring something more evil and oppressive ideologies like Maoism or the North Korean Juche . So people will be oppressed by one ideology or the other until the majority starts thinking free.
 
There is a lot of difference between being religious and being a fanatic.
No religion preaches hate, violance and non tolarance, it's a way of life, a line one could follow to archive peace.

Don't know much about any religion, do you?
 
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