Fascinating open source research reported by Gervais et al. (Open source):
Significance
Religion
is a cross-cultural human universal, and religions may have been
instrumental in the cultural evolution of widespread cooperation and
prosociality. Nonetheless, religiosity has rapidly declined in some
parts of the world over just a handful of decades. We tested whether
long-standing religious influence intuitively lingers, even in overtly
secular and nonreligious societies. Using a classic experimental
philosophy task, we found that even atheists in nonreligious societies
show evidence of intuitive preferences for religious belief over
atheism. This is compelling cross-cultural experimental evidence for
intuitive preferences for religion among nonbelievers—a hypothesized
phenomenon that philosopher Daniel Dennett dubbed belief in belief.
Abstract
We find evidence of belief in belief—intuitive
preferences for religious belief over atheism, even among atheist
participants—across eight comparatively secular countries. Religion is a
cross-cultural human universal, yet explicit markers of religiosity
have rapidly waned in large parts of the world in recent decades. We
explored whether intuitive religious influence lingers, even among
nonbelievers in largely secular societies. We adapted a classic
experimental philosophy task to test for this intuitive belief in belief
among people in eight comparatively nonreligious countries: Canada,
China, Czechia, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and
Vietnam (total N = 3,804). Our analyses revealed strong evidence
that 1) people intuitively favor religious belief over atheism and that
2) this pattern was not moderated by participants’ own self-reported
atheism. Indeed, 3) even atheists in relatively secular societies
intuitively prefer belief to atheism. These inferences were robust
across different analytic strategies and across other measures of
individual differences in religiosity and religious instruction.
Although explicit religious belief has rapidly declined in these
countries, it is possible that belief in belief may still persist. These
results speak to the complex psychological and cultural dynamics of
secularization.
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