IQ and Theism

by DJS 29 Replies latest jw friends

  • DJS
    DJS

    Rob Waugh Yahoo! News .Religious people are less intelligent than non-believers, according to a new review of 63 scientific studies stretching back over decades.

    A team led by Miron Zuckerman of the University of Rochester found “a reliable negative relation between intelligence and religiosity” in 53 out of 63 studies. Even in extreme old age, intelligent people are less likely to believe, the researchers found - and the reasons why people with high IQs shun religion may not be as simple as previously thought.

    Previous studies have tended to assume that intelligent people simply “know better”, the researchers write - but the reasons may be more complex.

    For instance, intelligent people are more likely to be married, and more likely to be successful in life - and this may mean they “need” religion less.

    The studies used in Zuckerman's paper included a life-long analysis of the beliefs of a group of 1,500 gifted children - those with IQs over 135 - in a study which began in 1921 and continues today. Even at 75 to 91 years of age, the children from Lewis Terman’s study scored lower for religiosity than the general population - contrary to the widely held belief that people turn to God as they age. The researchers noted that data was lacking about religious attitudes in old age and say, “Additional research is needed to resolve this issue.”

    As early as 1958, Michael Argyle concluded, “Although intelligent children grasp religious concepts earlier, they are also the first to doubt the truth of religion, and intelligent students are much less likely to accept orthodox beliefs, and rather less likely to have pro-religious attitudes.”

    A 1916 study quoted in Zuckerman’s paper (Leuba) found that, “58% of randomly selected scientists in the United States expressed disbelief in, or doubt regarding the existence of God; this proportion rose to nearly 70% for the most eminent scientists.” The paper, published in the academic journal Personality and Social Psychology Review, said “Most extant explanations (of a negative relation) share one central theme—the premise that religious beliefs are irrational, not anchored in science, not testable and, therefore, unappealing to intelligent people who “know better.”

    The answer may, however, be more complex. Intelligent people may simply be able to provide themselves with the psychological benefits offered by religion - such as “self-regulation and self-enhancement”, because they are more likely to be successful, and have stable lives. “Intelligent people typically spend more time in school—a form of self-regulation that may yield long-term benefits,” the researchers write. “More intelligent people get higher level jobs (and better employment (and higher salary) may lead to higher self-esteem, and encourage personal control beliefs.”

    “Last, more intelligent people are more likely to get and stay married (greater attachment), though for intelligent people, that too comes later in life. We therefore suggest that as intelligent people move from young adulthood to adulthood and then to middle age, the benefits of intelligence may continue to accrue.”

    The researchers suggest that further research on the “function” of religion may reveal more.. “People possessing the functions that religion provides are likely to adopt atheism, people lacking these very functions (e.g., the poor, the helpless) are likely to adopt theism,” the researchers wrote.

    .

  • stillin
    stillin

    With all of those helpful hints, maybe I could fake it!

  • scotoma
    scotoma

    This is known widely. Political leaders know this too. But, they pretend to believe in God because the majority of the electorate are "average" and believe in God.

    No openly atheist president will be elected in the next 50 years.

    This is also why you can be absolutely certain that the Watchtower prediction of the United Nations destroying religion is an insanely ridiculous idea.

    Belief in God doesn't mean you're dumb. It means you're "dumbth.

    Dumbth (pron. dum-th) adj: a tendency toward muddleheadedness, or willful stupidity appearing in all segments of American life.

  • FlyingHighNow
    FlyingHighNow

    Just about everyone in my family, both sides, has an IQ over 135. The only athiest among us is my grandson, who believes in astrology and all kinds of other things that walk the border of atheism and theism.

  • FlyingHighNow
    FlyingHighNow
    This is known widely. Political leaders know this too. But, they pretend to believe in God because the majority of the electorate are "average" and believe in God.

    It could be that you are confusing theism with fundamentalism.

  • never a jw
    never a jw

    I knew it. All those "C" in my school report cards and minimum wage jobs that I have held for the last 15 years don't really tell the story about my brain. I am smart. I don't believe in the personal God of the Bible. Thank you , thank you, thank you God

  • Watkins
    Watkins

    As jws we thought we were smarter than the average person because we knew 'the truth'. After breaking away from the cult-hold of that religion, some of us still have the need to make ourselves 'better than'. The arrogance continues... it's not a quality of the cult-minded, as I once thought, but a quality of an individual person's character. wt culls from the general population more than it's share of this personality type - we see it so clearly in elders' attitudes towards the 'lowly sheep'.

    I left that particular characteristic behind with the wt's other godly-character-building flaws. I'm not one that needs to feel 'better than' - so if that makes me less intelligent... oh, well... duh.

    I so dum... ben marryd 20 yeers... happie & full-filled, fun lyfe... no cults... no worrys... but I beleef in God... so must be doin sumthin wrong, er duuuh!

    pffft. w

  • Simon
    Simon

    No real surprise: desire to learn involves questioning and critiquing things, not just accepting any dogma that is told to you.

    Religious belief, that is the acceptance of something without any reason, evidence or logic whatsoever is not compatible with learning or intelligence.

  • bohm
    bohm

    without reading the study I am very critical about this . IQ and religiosity both correlate strongly with various hobbies, degree of education, income etc. and to draw any type of causal conclusion would be highly dubious.

    I bet religiosity also correlate negatively with being a vegan or gay activist. it says very little on its own.

  • tec
    tec

    I am sure that some of you can understand how those with above average IQ's, who also have faith in Christ and God (though this is not necesarily the same as 'religion'), don't put much stock in the conclusions drawn in tests such as these ones.

    You have to put stock a) in the conclusions, and b) in the IQ tests and their conclusions, and c) that IQ and knowing what is true is dependent upon one another as well.

    That's a lot of variables, and I'm sure there are even more than that that I cannot even conceive of.

    Peace,

    tammy

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit