Global evidence of extreme intuitive moral prejudice against atheists

Open Access
Authors
  • E.E. Buchtel
  • M. Aveyard
  • S.R. Schiavone
  • I. Dar-Nimrod
  • A.M. Svedholm-Häkkinen
  • T. Riekki
  • E. Kundtová Klocová
  • J.E. Ramsay
  • J. Bulbulia
Publication date 08-2017
Journal Nature Human Behaviour
Article number 0151
Volume | Issue number 1 | 8
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract
Mounting evidence supports long-standing claims that religions can extend cooperative networks. However, religious prosociality may have a strongly parochial component. Moreover, aspects of religion may promote or exacerbate conflict with those outside a given religious group, promoting regional violence, intergroup conflict and tacit prejudice against non-believers. Anti-atheist prejudice—a growing concern in increasingly secular societies —affects employment, elections, family life and broader social inclusion. Preliminary work in the United States suggests that anti-atheist prejudice stems, in part, from deeply rooted intuitions about religion’s putatively necessary role in morality. However, the cross-cultural prevalence and magnitude—as well as intracultural demographic stability—of such intuitions, as manifested in intuitive associations of immorality with atheists, remain unclear. Here, we quantify moral distrust of atheists by applying well-tested measures in a large global sample (N = 3,256; diverse countries). Consistent with cultural evolutionary theories of religion and morality, people in most—but not all— of these countries viewed extreme moral violations as representative of atheists. Notably, anti-atheist prejudice was even evident among atheist participants around the world. The results contrast with recent polls that do not find self-reported moral prejudice against atheists in highly secular countries, and imply that the recent rise in secularism in Western countries has not overwritten intuitive anti-atheist prejudice. Entrenched moral suspicion of atheists suggests that religion’s powerful influence on moral judgements persists, even among non-believers in secular societies.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary information. - Author correction published in: Nature Human Behaviour, volume 2, page 425 (2018)
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-017-0151
Other links https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-018-0322-7
Downloads
Gervais_et_al_NHB_preprint (Accepted author manuscript)
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