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rug

(82,333 posts)
Fri Apr 13, 2012, 03:35 PM Apr 2012

The rise of atheism in America [View all]

The number of disbelievers is growing, but they remain America's least trusted minority. Why?

posted on April 13, 2012, at 11:07 AM

How many atheists are there?

It depends on your definition of the term. Only between 1.5 and 4 percent of Americans admit to so-called "hard atheism," the conviction that no higher power exists. But a much larger share of the American public (19 percent) spurns organized religion in favor of a nondefined skepticism about faith. This group, sometimes collectively labeled the "Nones," is growing faster than any religious faith in the U.S. About two thirds of Nones say they are former believers; 24 percent are lapsed Catholics and 29 percent once identified with other Christian denominations. David Silverman, president of American Atheists, claims these Nones as members of his tribe. "If you don't have a belief in God, you're an atheist," he said. "It doesn't matter what you call yourself."

Why are so many people leaving religion?

It's primarily a backlash against the religious Right, say political scientists Robert Putnam and David Campbell. In their book, American Grace, they argue that the religious Right's politicization of faith in the 1990s turned younger, socially liberal Christians away from churches, even as conservatives became more zealous. The dropouts were turned off by churches' Old Testament condemnation of homosexuals, premarital sex, contraception, and abortion. The Catholic Church's sex scandals also prompted millions to equate religion with moralistic hypocrisy. "While the Republican base has become ever more committed to mixing religion and politics," Putnam and Campbell write, "the rest of the country has been moving in the opposite direction." As society becomes more secular, researchers say, doubters are more confident about identifying themselves as nonbelievers. "The collapse of institutional religion in the first 10 years of this century [has] freed so many people to say they don't really care," said author Diana Butler Bass.

http://theweek.com/article/index/226625/the-rise-of-atheism-in-america

34 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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There is a lot of talk about this whole phenomenon. cbayer Apr 2012 #1
The term "atheist" is a problem to many longship Apr 2012 #2
As long as they don't try to shove their beliefs down everybody's throat I just don't mind. AlbertCat Apr 2012 #15
Who does? All theists? cbayer Apr 2012 #21
As A Lifetime Atheist 1ProudAtheist Apr 2012 #3
While I like and respect your description of who you are and how you got there, cbayer Apr 2012 #4
Not all theists believe in "myths and fairy tales." eqfan592 Apr 2012 #12
Do you refer to "Greek Mythology"? Goblinmonger Apr 2012 #19
Why do you use the word "denounce" when speaking of higher beings? Gman Apr 2012 #5
Atheists Are Not Arrogant 1ProudAtheist Apr 2012 #6
Well... Gman Apr 2012 #7
Calling a myth a myth doesn't make one arrogant. eqfan592 Apr 2012 #10
We are just well educated and accepting of scientific fact rather than myths and fairy-tales. AlbertCat Apr 2012 #16
It is possible to be a scientist and a theist. cbayer Apr 2012 #22
While all religionists are theists, not all theists are religionists. eqfan592 Apr 2012 #24
That's not a well working hypothesis tama Apr 2012 #26
Buddhists are an exception to be sure. eqfan592 Apr 2012 #28
Yup tama Apr 2012 #30
To be a true Atheist: tama Apr 2012 #8
tama, I hate to say it, but posts such as this don't really aid your cause or your case. eqfan592 Apr 2012 #11
I'm aware tama Apr 2012 #17
LOL! laconicsax Apr 2012 #23
Your perception tama Apr 2012 #25
Yes I can. laconicsax Apr 2012 #27
And what is tama Apr 2012 #29
In this context, whether the action was fulfilling a job description. laconicsax Apr 2012 #31
That first point separates creationists from thinking people. laconicsax Apr 2012 #14
Yes it does tama Apr 2012 #18
Ooh! I get to be a "True Atheist?" How fun! laconicsax Apr 2012 #20
You do, of course, realize that all of that is only true for you? darkstar3 Apr 2012 #9
I tend to agree with you. (nt) eqfan592 Apr 2012 #13
LOL - Thanks for providing an example of the No True Scotsman fallacy! bananas Apr 2012 #32
I don't know that atheism is on the rise, just that more people are coming "out of the closet" about raccoon Apr 2012 #33
There are roughly 300 active atheists frogmarch Apr 2012 #34
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