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Irreligion is the absence or rejection of religious beliefs or practices It encompasses a wide range of viewpoints drawn

Irreligion

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Irreligion
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Irreligion is the absence or rejection of religious beliefs or practices. It encompasses a wide range of viewpoints drawn from various philosophical and intellectual perspectives, including atheism, agnosticism, religious skepticism, rationalism, secularism, and non-religious spirituality. These perspectives can vary, with individuals who identify as irreligious holding diverse beliefs about religion and its role in their lives.

Relatively little scholarly research was published on irreligion until around the year 2010.

Overview

Over the past several decades,[when?] the number of secular persons has increased, with a rapid rise in the early 21st century, in many countries.: 4 : 112  In virtually every high-income country and many poor countries, religion has declined.: 112  Highly secular societies tend to be societally healthy and successful. Social scientists have predicted declines in religious beliefs and their replacement with more scientific/naturalistic outlooks (secularization hypothesis). According to Ronald Inglehart, this trend seems likely to continue and a reverse rarely lasts long because the trend is driven by technological innovation. However, other researchers disagree (contra-secularization hypothesis). By 2050, Pew Research Center (Pew) expects irreligious people to probably decline as a share of the world population (16.4% to 13.2%), at least for a time, because of faster population growth in highly religious countries and shrinking populations in at least some less religious countries. Many countries may also be gradually becoming more secular, generation by generation. Younger generations tend to be less religious than their elders.: 5  They might become more religious as they age, but still be less religious than previous generations if their countries become more affluent and stable.: 13  Nonetheless, secularization is compatible with religion since most versions of secularity do not lead to atheism or irreligion. Religious congruence, that is consistency between beliefs and behaviors, in individuals is rare.: 2  Religious incongruence is not the same thing as religious insincerity or hypocrisy.: 5  The widespread religious congruence fallacy occurs when interpretations or explanations unjustifiably presume religious congruence.: 19  This fallacy also infects "New Atheist" critiques of religion.: 21 

Estimating the number of irreligious people in the world is difficult. Those who do not affiliate with a religion are diverse. In many countries censuses and demographic surveys do not separate atheists, agnostics and those responding "nothing in particular" as distinct populations, obscuring significant differences that may exist between them.: 60  People can feel reasonable anxieties about giving a politically ‘wrong’ answer – in either direction. Measurement of irreligiosity requires a high degree of cultural sensitivity, especially outside the West, where the concepts of "religion" or "the secular" are not always rooted in local culture and may not even be present.: 31–34  The sharp distinction, and often antagonism, between "religious" and "secular" is culturally and historically unique to the West since in most of human history and cultures, there was little differentiation between the natural and supernatural and concepts do not always transfer across cultures.: 31  Forms of secularity always reflect the societal, historical, cultural and religious contexts in which they emerge, and distinctions are sharp in religiously dominant contexts.: 31  Also, there's considerable prevalence of atheism and agnosticism in ancient Asian texts. Atheistic traditions have played a significant part in those cultures for millennia. "Cultural religion" must be taken into account: non-religious people can be found in religious categories, especially where religion has very deep-seated religious roots in a culture.: 59  Many of the religiously unaffiliated have some religious beliefs.: 24  Also, some of them engage in certain kinds of religious practices.: 24  In 2016, Zuckerman, Galen and Pasquale estimated there were 400 million nonreligious or nontheistic people. A 2022 Gallup International Association (GIA) survey, done in 61 countries, reported that 62% of respondents said they are religious, one in four that they aren't, 10% that they're atheists and the rest are not sure. In 2016, it found similar results (62%, 25%, 9% and 5%), also in 2014.: 1 : 3  People in the European Union, East Asia and Oceania were the least religious. In 2010, according to Pew, the religiously unaffiliated numbered more than 1.1 billion, about one-in-six people (16.3% of an estimated 6.9 billion).: 24 : 25  76% of them resided in the 60 countries of Asia-Pacific.: 25 : 46 : 66 China, officially an atheist state and considered to be the world's first or second most populous country, alone held the majority (62.2% or about 700 million).: 1 : 25 : 46 : 66  Nevertheless, several smaller countries, especially in Europe and Asia, eclipse China's percent of residents who are irreligious with even higher proportions. Shares were relatively similar in three of the six regions: Asia-Pacific (21.2% of more than 4 billion), Europe (18.2% of more than 742 thousands) and North America (17.1% of more than 344 thousands).: 25 Men, younger people, and whites, Asians, and people of Jewish heritage are more likely to be secular.

Etymology

Irreligion is either a borrowing from French or from Latin. The term irreligion is a combination of the noun religion and the ir- form of the prefix in-, signifying "not" (similar to irrelevant). It was first attested in French as irréligion in 1527, then in English as irreligion in 1598. It was borrowed into Dutch as irreligie in the 17th century, though it is not certain from which language.

Definition

According to the encyclopedia Britannica, the term irreligion is frequently characterized differently depending on context. Sometimes, surveys of religious belief use lack of identification with a religion as a marker of irreligion. This can be misleading: in some cases a person may identify with a religious cultural institution but not hold the doctrines of that institution or take part in its religious practice.

Some scholars define irreligion as the active rejection of religion, as opposed to the mere absence of religion. The Encyclopedia of Religion and Society defines it as: "Active rejection of religion in general or any of its more specific organized forms. It is thus distinct from the secular, which simply refers to the absence of religion. [...] In contemporary usage, it is increasingly employed as a synonym for unbelief [...]" Sociologist Colin Campbell also describes it as "deliberate indifference towards religion", in his 1971 Towards a Sociology of Irreligion.

The Oxford English Dictionary has two definitions, one of which is labelled obsolete (first published in 1900). It is want of religion; hostility to or disregard of religious principles; irreligious conduct.

The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines it as "the quality or state of being irreligious" and "irreligious" as "neglectful of religion: lacking religious emotions, doctrines, or practices", also "indicating lack of religion".

Also for "religion", there is no universally agreed-upon definition, even within the social sciences.: 15 

Types

  • Agnostic atheism is a philosophical position that encompasses both atheism and agnosticism. Agnostic atheists are atheistic because they do not believe in the existence of any deity and agnostic because they claim that the existence of a deity is either unknowable in principle or unknown in fact.
  • Agnosticism is the view that the existence of God, the divine, and the supernatural are unknown or unknowable.
  • or alatry (Greek: from the privative ἀ- + λατρεία (latreia) = worship) is the recognition of the existence of one or more gods, but with a deliberate lack of worship of any deity. Typically, it includes the belief that religious rituals have no supernatural significance and that gods ignore all prayers and worship.
  • Anti-clericalism is opposition to religious authority, typically in social or political matters.
  • Antireligion is opposition to or rejection of religion of any kind.
  • Antitheism is the explicit opposition to theism. The term has had a range of applications. It typically refers to direct opposition to belief in any deity.
  • Apatheism is the attitude of apathy or indifference toward the existence or non-existence of any deity.
  • Atheism is the lack of belief that any deities exist; in a narrower sense, positive atheism is specifically the position that there are factually no deities. There are ranges of negative and positive atheism.
  • "Cultural religion": 59 
  • Deism is a philosophical position and rationalistic theology that rejects revelation as a source of knowledge and asserts that empirical reason and observation of the natural world are exclusively logical, reliable, and sufficient to determine the existence of a Supreme Being as the creator of the universe.
  • Freethought.: 14  It holds that positions regarding truth should be formed on the basis of logic, reason, and empiricism rather than authority, tradition, revelation, or dogma.
  • Ietsism is an unspecified belief in an undetermined transcendent reality.
  • Ignosticism, also known as igtheism, is the idea that the question of the existence of God is meaningless because the word "God" has no coherent, unambiguous definition.
  • Naturalism is the idea or belief that only natural (as opposed to supernatural or spiritual) laws and forces operate in the universe.
  • New Atheism is the position of some atheist academics, writers, scientists, and philosophers of the 20th and 21st centuries, such as Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, and Daniel Dennett.
  • Nones can be used to refer to those who are unaffiliated with any organized religion. This use derives from surveys of religious affiliation, in which "None" (or "None of the above") is typically the last choice. Since this status can be chosen because of lack of organizational affiliation or lack of personal belief, it is a more specific concept than irreligion. A 2015 Gallup, Inc. poll concluded that in the United States "nones" were growing as a percentage of the population, while Christians were declining and non-Christians also increasing but to a much lesser degree, since the 1950s.
  • Nontheism: 14 
  • Post-theism is a variant of nontheism that proposes that the division of theism and atheism is obsolete and that the God-idea belongs to a stage of human development now past. Within nontheism, post-theism can be contrasted with antitheism.
  • Religious skepticism is a type of skepticism about religion.
  • Secular ethics is a branch of moral philosophy in which ethics is based solely on human faculties, such as logic, empathy, reason, and ethical intuition, and not derived from belief in supernatural revelation or guidance—a source of ethics in many religions.
  • Secular humanism is a system of thought that prioritizes human rather than divine matters.
  • Secular liberalism is a form of liberalism in which secularist principles and values, and sometimes non-religious ethics, are especially emphasized.
  • Secular paganism is an outlook that upholds the virtues and principles associated with paganism while maintaining a secular worldview.
  • Secularism.: 14  It is also used to describe a political conviction in favor of minimizing religion in the public sphere that may be advocated for regardless of personal religiosity. Sometimes, especially in the United States, it is also a synonym for naturalism or atheism.
  • "Spiritual but not religious" (SBNR) is a designation coined by Robert C. Fuller for people who reject traditional or organized religion but have strong metaphysical beliefs. The SBNR may be included under the definition of nonreligion, but are sometimes classified as a wholly distinct group.
  • Theological noncognitivism is the argument that religious language—specifically, words such as God—are not cognitively meaningful. It is sometimes considered synonymous with ignosticism.
  • Transtheism refers to a system of thought or religious philosophy that is neither theistic nor atheistic but beyond them.

History

In the early 1970s, Colin Campbell began a sociological study of irreligion.: 13 

Human rights

In 1993, the United Nations Human Rights Committee declared that article 18 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights "protects theistic, non-theistic and atheistic beliefs, as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief." The committee further stated that "the freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief necessarily entails the freedom to choose a religion or belief, including the right to replace one's current religion or belief with another or to adopt atheistic views." Signatories to the convention are barred from "the use of threat of physical force or penal sanctions to compel believers or non-believers" to recant their beliefs or convert.

Most democracies protect the freedom of religion or belief, and it is largely implied in respective legal systems that those who do not believe or observe any religion are allowed freedom of thought.

A noted exception to ambiguity, explicitly allowing non-religion, is Article 36 of the Constitution of China (as adopted in 1982), which states that "No state organ, public organization or individual may compel citizens to believe in, or not believe in, any religion; nor may they discriminate against citizens who believe in, or do not believe in, any religion." Article 46 of China's 1978 Constitution was even more explicit, stating that "Citizens enjoy freedom to believe in religion and freedom not to believe in religion and to propagate atheism."

Demographics

image
Nonreligious population by country, in 2010

Women, when in the labor force, are similar to men in their religiosity. When out of the labor force, women tend to be more religious.

In many countries censuses and demographic surveys do not separate atheists, agnostics and those responding "nothing in particular" as distinct populations.: 60 

Eleven countries have nonreligious majorities. In 2020, the countries with the highest percentage of "Non-Religious" ("Term encompassing both (a) agnostics; and (b) atheists") were North Korea, the Czech Republic and Estonia. According to the 2018 Chinese General Social Survey, the country had the largest count of unaffiliated people: about one billion adults. Some broadly religious practices continue to play a significant role in the lives of a substantial shares of the Chinese population.

Determining objective irreligion, as part of societal or individual levels of secularity and religiosity, requires a high degree of cultural sensitivity from researchers. This is especially so outside the Western world, where the concepts of "religious" and "secular" are not necessarily rooted in local culture or even exist.: 31–34  "Cultural religion" is a vivid reality.: 59  It must be taken into account when trying to ascertain the numeric strength of atheism and agnosticism in a country.: 59  It is generally not considered more important than self-identification measures.: 59  Non-religious people can be found in religious categories.: 59  This is especially the case where religion has very deep-seated religious roots in a culture, such as with Christianity in Europe, Islam in the Middle East, Hinduism in India, and Buddhism in South-east Asia.: 59  For instance, Scandinavian countries have among the highest measures of nonreligiosity and even atheism in Europe. For example, 58% of the Swedish population identify with the Church of Sweden. Yet, 47% of atheists who live in those countries are still formally members of the national churches. In much of East Asia, ritual behavior holds greater salience than belief.: 31  China has state atheism and is a Leninist religious state, which maintains dominance over all other religions.: 1  About 85% of its population practice various kinds of religious behaviors with some regularity.: 2  Many East Asians identify as "without religion" (wú zōngjiào in Chinese, mu shūkyō in Japanese, mu jong-gyo in Korean), but "religion" in that context refers only to Buddhism or Christianity. Most of the people "without religion" practice Shinto and other folk religions. In the Muslim world, those who claim to be "not religious" mostly imply not strictly observing Islam, and in Israel, being "secular" means not strictly observing Orthodox Judaism. Vice versa, many American Jews share the worldviews of nonreligious people though affiliated with a Jewish denomination, and in Russia, growing identification with Eastern Orthodoxy is mainly motivated by cultural and nationalist considerations, without much concrete belief. In the United States, the majority of the "Nones", those without a religious affiliation, have belief in a god or higher power, spiritual forces beyond the natural world, and souls. Even 23% of self-identified atheists believe in a higher power, but not a god as described in the bible.

In 2016, Zuckerman, Galen and Pasquale estimated there were 400 million nonreligious or nontheistic people. In their 2013 essay, Ariela Keysar and Juhem Navarro-Rivera estimated there were about 450 to 500 million nonbelievers, including both "positive" and "negative" atheists, or approximately 7% of the world population. These estimates come from the International Social Survey Programme 2008 survey in which 40 countries took part. In 2010, the religiously unaffiliated numbered more than 1.1 billion (around 1,126,500,000 persons), about one-in-six people (16.3% of an estimated 6,9 billion world population), according to Pew Research Center.: 24 : 25  In Pew reports, "unaffiliated" are atheists, agnostics, and people who checked "nothing in particular".: 60  76% of them resided in one of the six regions: Asia-Pacific.: 25  A 2012 WIN/Gallup International report on a poll from 57 countries reported that 59% of the world's population identified as a religious person, 23% as not a religious person, 13% as "convinced atheists", and also a 9% decrease in identification as "religious" when compared to the 2005 average from 39 countries. A 2015 WIN/Gallup International poll found that 63% of the globe identified as a religious person, 22% as not a religious person, and 11% as "convinced atheists". Their 2016 survey found that 62% of the globe identified as a religious person, less than 25% as not a religious person, 9% others as "convinced atheists" and 5% others "Do not know/no response". Keysar and Navarro-Rivera advised caution with these figures since other surveys have consistently reached lower figures for the number of atheists worldwide.: 553 : 554 

Inverse association between intelligence and religiosity, and the inverse correlation between intelligence and fertility might lead to a decline in non-religious identity (contra-secularization hypothesis) in the foreseeable future.: 2  In 2007, sociologist Phil Zuckerman's global studies on atheism have indicated that global atheism may be in decline due to irreligious countries having the lowest birth rates in the world and religious countries having higher birth rates in general. A Pew 2015 global projection study for religion and nonreligion, projected that between 2010 and 2050, there will be some initial increases of the unaffiliated followed by a decline by 2050. Some theorists think religion will fade away but Pew reveals a more complicated picture. Pew predicts the unaffiliated share of the world population will decrease, at least for a while, from 16.4% to 13.2% by 2050. Pew states that religious areas are experiencing the fastest growth because of higher fertility and younger populations. By 2060, Pew says the number of unaffiliated will increase by over 35 million, but the overall population-percentage will decrease to 13% because the total population will grow faster. This would be mostly because of relatively old age and low fertility rates in less religious societies such as East Asia, particularly China and Japan, but also Western Europe. By 2019, 43 out of 49 countries studied continued to become less religious.: 110 

Relatively few unbelievers select ‘Atheist’ or ‘Agnostic’ as their preferred (non)religious or secular identity.: 3  Being nonreligious is not necessarily equivalent to being an atheist or agnostic. Many of the nonreligious have some religious beliefs.: 24  Also, some of the unaffiliated engage in certain kinds of religious practices.: 24  For example, "belief in God or a higher power is shared by 7% of Chinese unaffiliated adults, 30% of French unaffiliated adults and 68% of unaffiliated U.S. adults.: 24  Being unaffiliated with a religion on polls does not automatically mean objectively nonreligious since there are, for example, unaffiliated people who fall under religious measures, just as some unbelievers may still attend a church or other place of worship.[pages needed] Out of the global nonreligious population, 76.2% reside in Asia-Pacific, while the remainder reside in Europe (12%), North America (5.2%), Latin America and the Caribbean (4%), sub-Saharan Africa (2.4%) and the Middle East and North Africa (0.2%).: 24 

By population

The Pew Research Center in the table below reflects "religiously unaffiliated" in 2010 which "include atheists, agnostics, and people who do not identify with any particular religion in surveys".

The Zuckerman data on the table below only reflect the number of people who have an absence of belief in a deity only (atheists, agnostics). These do not include the broader number of people who do not identify with a particular religion, such as deists, pantheists, and spiritual but not religious people.

Country Pew (2012) Zuckerman (2004)
image Mainland China 700,680,000 103,907,840 – 181,838,720
image India 102,870,000
image Japan 72,120,000 81,493,120 – 82,766,450
image Vietnam 26,040,000 66,978,900
image Russia 23,180,000 34,507,680 – 69,015,360
image Germany 20,350,000 33,794,250 – 40,388,250
image France 17,580,000 25,982,320 – 32,628,960
image United Kingdom 18,684,010 – 26,519,240
image South Korea 22,350,000 14,579,400 – 25,270,960
image Ukraine 9,546,400
image United States 50,980,000 8,790,840 – 26,822,520
image Netherlands 6,364,020 – 7,179,920
image Canada 6,176,520 – 9,752,400
image Spain 6,042,150 – 9,667,440
image Taiwan 5,460,000
image Hong Kong 5,240,000
image Czech Republic 5,328,940 – 6,250,121
image Australia 4,779,120 – 4,978,250
image Belgium 4,346,160 – 4,449,640
image Sweden 4,133,560 – 7,638,100
image Italy 3,483,420 – 8,708,550
image North Korea 17,350,000 3,404,700
image Hungary 3,210,240 – 4,614,720
image Bulgaria 2,556,120 – 3,007,200
image Denmark 2,327,590 – 4,330,400
image Turkey 1,956,990 - 6,320,550
image Belarus 1,752,870
image Greece 1,703,680
image Kazakhstan 1,665,840 – 1,817,280
image Argentina 1,565,800 – 3,131,600
image Austria 1,471,500 – 2,125,500
image Finland 1,460,200 – 3,129,000
image Norway 1,418,250 – 3,294,000
image  Switzerland 1,266,670 – 2,011,770
image Israel 929,850 – 2,293,630
image New Zealand 798,800 – 878,680
image Cuba 791,630
image Slovenia 703,850 – 764,180
image Estonia 657,580
image Dominican Republic 618,380
image Singapore 566,020
image Slovakia 542,400 – 1,518,720
image Lithuania 469,040
image Latvia 461,200 – 668,740
image Portugal 420,960 – 947,160
image Armenia 118,740
image Uruguay 407,880
image Kyrgyzstan 355,670
image Croatia 314,790
image Albania 283,600
image Mongolia 247,590
image Iceland 47,040 – 67,620
image Brazil 15,410,000

Historical trends

Since 2007, there has been a sharp trend away from religion. From about 2007 to 2019, 43 out of 49 countries studied became less religious. Past influential thinkers from Karl Marx to Max Weber to Émile Durkheim thought that the spread of scientific knowledge would dispel religion throughout the world.: 112  Industrialization also didn't cause religion to disappear.: 110 Political scientists Ronald Inglehart and Pippa Norris argue faith is "more emotional than cognitive", and both advance an alternative thesis termed "existential security." They postulate that rather than knowledge or ignorance of scientific learning, it is the weakness or vulnerability of a society that determines religiosity. They claim that increased poverty and chaos make religious values more important to a society, while wealth and security diminish its role. As need for religious support diminishes, there is less willingness to "accept its constraints, including keeping women in the kitchen and gay people in the closet".

Prior to the 1980s

Rates of people identifying as non-religious began rising in most societies at least as early as the turn of the 20th century. In 1968, sociologist Glenn M. Vernon wrote that US census respondents who identified as "no religion" were insufficiently defined because they were defined in terms of a negative. He contrasted the label with the term "independent" for political affiliation, which still includes people who participate in civic activities. He suggested this difficulty in definition was partially due to the dilemma of defining religious activity beyond membership, attendance, or other identification with a formal religious group. During the 1970s, social scientists still tended to describe irreligion from a perspective that considered religion as normative for humans. Irreligion was described in terms of hostility, reactivity, or indifference toward religion, and or as developing from radical theologies.

1981–2019

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In a study of religious trends in 49 countries (they contained 60 percent of the world’s population) from 1981 to 2007, Inglehart and Norris found an overall, but not universal, increase in religiosity.: 110  Respondents in 33 of 49 countries rated themselves higher on a scale from one to ten when asked how important God was in their lives. This increase occurred in most former communist and developing countries. Most high-income countries became less religious.: 112  A sharp reversal of the global trend occurred from 2007 to 2019, when 43 out of 49 countries studied became less religious. This reversal appeared across most of the world. The decline in belief was not confined to high-income countries and appeared across most of the world. In virtually every high-income country, religion has continued to decline.: 112  At the same time, many poor countries, together with most of the former communist states, have also become less religious.: 112  From 2007 to 2019, only five countries became more religious, whereas the vast majority of the countries studied moved in the opposite direction.: 112  India is the most important exception to the general pattern of declining religiosity.: 112  The United States was a dramatic example of declining religiosity – with the mean rating of importance of religion dropping from 8.2 to 4.6 – while India was a major exception. Research in 1989 recorded disparities in religious adherence for different faith groups, with people from Christian and tribal traditions leaving religion at a greater rate than those from Muslim, Hindu, or Buddhist faiths.

Inglehart and Norris speculate that the decline in religiosity comes from a decline in the social need for traditional gender and sexual norms, ("virtually all world religions instilled" pro-fertility norms such as "producing as many children as possible and discouraged divorce, abortion, homosexuality, contraception, and any sexual behavior not linked to reproduction" in their adherents for centuries) as life expectancy rose and infant mortality dropped. They also argue that the idea that religion was necessary to prevent a collapse of social cohesion and public morality was belied by lower levels of corruption and murder in less religious countries. They argue that both of these trends are based on the theory that as societies develop, survival becomes more secure: starvation, once pervasive, becomes uncommon; life expectancy increases; murder and other forms of violence diminish. As this level of security rises, there is less social/economic need for the high birthrates that religion encourages and less emotional need for the comfort of religious belief. Change in acceptance of "divorce, abortion, and homosexuality" has been measured by the World Values Survey and shown to have grown throughout the world outside of Muslim-majority countries. Several very comprehensive surveys in the Middle East and Iran have come to similar conclusions: there is an increase in secularization and growing calls for reforms in religious political institutions.

See also

  • Apostasy
  • Faith deconstruction
  • Growth of religion
  • Importance of religion by country
  • Infidel
  • Laїcité
  • Pantheism
  • Secular religion
  • Atheism

References

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  20. "More Prone to Believe in God than Identify as Religious. More Likely to Believe in Heaven than in Hell". Gallup International Association. 4 December 2023. Retrieved 9 December 2024.
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  23. Zuckerman, Phil; Shook, John R., eds. (2017). "15 Sacred, Secular, and Neosacred Governments in China and Taiwan". Oxford Academic. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199988457.013.16. ISBN 978-0-19-998845-7. Retrieved 22 December 2024.
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  34. Zuckerman, Galen et al., p. 119.
  35. Zuckerman, Shook, (in bibliography), p. 575.
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Bibliography

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  • Arie Johan Vanderjagt, Richard Henry Popkin, ed. (1993). Scepticism and irreligion in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-09596-0.
  • Eric Wright (2010). Irreligion: Thought, Rationale, History. BiblioBazaar. ISBN 978-1-171-06863-1.
  • Dillon, Michele (2015). "Christian Affiliation and Disaffiliation in the United States: Generational and Cultural Change". In Hunt, Stephen J. (ed.). Handbook of Global Contemporary Christianity: Themes and Developments in Culture, Politics, and Society. Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion. Vol. 10. Leiden: Brill Publishers. pp. 346–365. doi:10.1163/9789004291027_019. ISBN 978-90-04-26538-7. ISSN 1874-6691.
  • Eller, Jack David (2010). "What Is Atheism?". In Zuckerman, Phil (ed.). Atheism and Secularity. Volume 1: Issues, Concepts, Definitions. Santa Barbara, California: Praeger. pp. 1–18. ISBN 978-0-313-35183-9.
  •  ———  (2017). "Varieties of Secular Experience". In Zuckerman, Phil; Shook, John R. (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Secularism. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 499ff. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199988457.013.31. ISBN 978-0-19-998845-7.
  • Glasner, Peter E. (1977). The Sociology of Secularisation: A Critique of a Concept. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 978-0-7100-8455-2.
  • Iversen, Hans Raun (2013). "Secularization, Secularity, Secularism". In Runehov, Anne L. C.; Oviedo, Lluis (eds.). Encyclopedia of Sciences and Religions. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Springer. pp. 2116–2121. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-8265-8_1024. ISBN 978-1-4020-8265-8.
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Notes

  1. Depending on whether or not the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau and/or Taiwan are included in the population statistics of China. The table in the transcluded source excludes all three, referring to the population of Mainland China only.
  • The Understanding Unbelief program in the University of Kent.
  • "Will religion ever disappear?", from BBC Future, by Rachel Nuwer, in December 2014
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Irreligion is the absence or rejection of religious beliefs or practices It encompasses a wide range of viewpoints drawn from various philosophical and intellectual perspectives including atheism agnosticism religious skepticism rationalism secularism and non religious spirituality These perspectives can vary with individuals who identify as irreligious holding diverse beliefs about religion and its role in their lives Relatively little scholarly research was published on irreligion until around the year 2010 OverviewOver the past several decades when the number of secular persons has increased with a rapid rise in the early 21st century in many countries 4 112 In virtually every high income country and many poor countries religion has declined 112 Highly secular societies tend to be societally healthy and successful Social scientists have predicted declines in religious beliefs and their replacement with more scientific naturalistic outlooks secularization hypothesis According to Ronald Inglehart this trend seems likely to continue and a reverse rarely lasts long because the trend is driven by technological innovation However other researchers disagree contra secularization hypothesis By 2050 Pew Research Center Pew expects irreligious people to probably decline as a share of the world population 16 4 to 13 2 at least for a time because of faster population growth in highly religious countries and shrinking populations in at least some less religious countries Many countries may also be gradually becoming more secular generation by generation Younger generations tend to be less religious than their elders 5 They might become more religious as they age but still be less religious than previous generations if their countries become more affluent and stable 13 Nonetheless secularization is compatible with religion since most versions of secularity do not lead to atheism or irreligion Religious congruence that is consistency between beliefs and behaviors in individuals is rare 2 Religious incongruence is not the same thing as religious insincerity or hypocrisy 5 The widespread religious congruence fallacy occurs when interpretations or explanations unjustifiably presume religious congruence 19 This fallacy also infects New Atheist critiques of religion 21 Estimating the number of irreligious people in the world is difficult Those who do not affiliate with a religion are diverse In many countries censuses and demographic surveys do not separate atheists agnostics and those responding nothing in particular as distinct populations obscuring significant differences that may exist between them 60 People can feel reasonable anxieties about giving a politically wrong answer in either direction Measurement of irreligiosity requires a high degree of cultural sensitivity especially outside the West where the concepts of religion or the secular are not always rooted in local culture and may not even be present 31 34 The sharp distinction and often antagonism between religious and secular is culturally and historically unique to the West since in most of human history and cultures there was little differentiation between the natural and supernatural and concepts do not always transfer across cultures 31 Forms of secularity always reflect the societal historical cultural and religious contexts in which they emerge and distinctions are sharp in religiously dominant contexts 31 Also there s considerable prevalence of atheism and agnosticism in ancient Asian texts Atheistic traditions have played a significant part in those cultures for millennia Cultural religion must be taken into account non religious people can be found in religious categories especially where religion has very deep seated religious roots in a culture 59 Many of the religiously unaffiliated have some religious beliefs 24 Also some of them engage in certain kinds of religious practices 24 In 2016 Zuckerman Galen and Pasquale estimated there were 400 million nonreligious or nontheistic people A 2022 Gallup International Association GIA survey done in 61 countries reported that 62 of respondents said they are religious one in four that they aren t 10 that they re atheists and the rest are not sure In 2016 it found similar results 62 25 9 and 5 also in 2014 1 3 People in the European Union East Asia and Oceania were the least religious In 2010 according to Pew the religiously unaffiliated numbered more than 1 1 billion about one in six people 16 3 of an estimated 6 9 billion 24 25 76 of them resided in the 60 countries of Asia Pacific 25 46 66 China officially an atheist state and considered to be the world s first or second most populous country alone held the majority 62 2 or about 700 million 1 25 46 66 Nevertheless several smaller countries especially in Europe and Asia eclipse China s percent of residents who are irreligious with even higher proportions Shares were relatively similar in three of the six regions Asia Pacific 21 2 of more than 4 billion Europe 18 2 of more than 742 thousands and North America 17 1 of more than 344 thousands 25 Men younger people and whites Asians and people of Jewish heritage are more likely to be secular EtymologyIrreligion is either a borrowing from French or from Latin The term irreligion is a combination of the noun religion and the ir form of the prefix in signifying not similar to irrelevant It was first attested in French as irreligion in 1527 then in English as irreligion in 1598 It was borrowed into Dutch as irreligie in the 17th century though it is not certain from which language DefinitionAccording to the encyclopedia Britannica the term irreligion is frequently characterized differently depending on context Sometimes surveys of religious belief use lack of identification with a religion as a marker of irreligion This can be misleading in some cases a person may identify with a religious cultural institution but not hold the doctrines of that institution or take part in its religious practice Some scholars define irreligion as the active rejection of religion as opposed to the mere absence of religion The Encyclopedia of Religion and Society defines it as Active rejection of religion in general or any of its more specific organized forms It is thus distinct from the secular which simply refers to the absence of religion In contemporary usage it is increasingly employed as a synonym for unbelief Sociologist Colin Campbell also describes it as deliberate indifference towards religion in his 1971 Towards a Sociology of Irreligion The Oxford English Dictionary has two definitions one of which is labelled obsolete first published in 1900 It is want of religion hostility to or disregard of religious principles irreligious conduct The Merriam Webster Dictionary defines it as the quality or state of being irreligious and irreligious as neglectful of religion lacking religious emotions doctrines or practices also indicating lack of religion Also for religion there is no universally agreed upon definition even within the social sciences 15 TypesAgnostic atheism is a philosophical position that encompasses both atheism and agnosticism Agnostic atheists are atheistic because they do not believe in the existence of any deity and agnostic because they claim that the existence of a deity is either unknowable in principle or unknown in fact Agnosticism is the view that the existence of God the divine and the supernatural are unknown or unknowable or alatry Greek from the privative ἀ latreia latreia worship is the recognition of the existence of one or more gods but with a deliberate lack of worship of any deity Typically it includes the belief that religious rituals have no supernatural significance and that gods ignore all prayers and worship Anti clericalism is opposition to religious authority typically in social or political matters Antireligion is opposition to or rejection of religion of any kind Antitheism is the explicit opposition to theism The term has had a range of applications It typically refers to direct opposition to belief in any deity Apatheism is the attitude of apathy or indifference toward the existence or non existence of any deity Atheism is the lack of belief that any deities exist in a narrower sense positive atheism is specifically the position that there are factually no deities There are ranges of negative and positive atheism Cultural religion 59 Deism is a philosophical position and rationalistic theology that rejects revelation as a source of knowledge and asserts that empirical reason and observation of the natural world are exclusively logical reliable and sufficient to determine the existence of a Supreme Being as the creator of the universe Freethought 14 It holds that positions regarding truth should be formed on the basis of logic reason and empiricism rather than authority tradition revelation or dogma Ietsism is an unspecified belief in an undetermined transcendent reality Ignosticism also known as igtheism is the idea that the question of the existence of God is meaningless because the word God has no coherent unambiguous definition Naturalism is the idea or belief that only natural as opposed to supernatural or spiritual laws and forces operate in the universe New Atheism is the position of some atheist academics writers scientists and philosophers of the 20th and 21st centuries such as Richard Dawkins Sam Harris and Daniel Dennett Nones can be used to refer to those who are unaffiliated with any organized religion This use derives from surveys of religious affiliation in which None or None of the above is typically the last choice Since this status can be chosen because of lack of organizational affiliation or lack of personal belief it is a more specific concept than irreligion A 2015 Gallup Inc poll concluded that in the United States nones were growing as a percentage of the population while Christians were declining and non Christians also increasing but to a much lesser degree since the 1950s Nontheism 14 Post theism is a variant of nontheism that proposes that the division of theism and atheism is obsolete and that the God idea belongs to a stage of human development now past Within nontheism post theism can be contrasted with antitheism Religious skepticism is a type of skepticism about religion Secular ethics is a branch of moral philosophy in which ethics is based solely on human faculties such as logic empathy reason and ethical intuition and not derived from belief in supernatural revelation or guidance a source of ethics in many religions Secular humanism is a system of thought that prioritizes human rather than divine matters Secular liberalism is a form of liberalism in which secularist principles and values and sometimes non religious ethics are especially emphasized Secular paganism is an outlook that upholds the virtues and principles associated with paganism while maintaining a secular worldview Secularism 14 It is also used to describe a political conviction in favor of minimizing religion in the public sphere that may be advocated for regardless of personal religiosity Sometimes especially in the United States it is also a synonym for naturalism or atheism Spiritual but not religious SBNR is a designation coined by Robert C Fuller for people who reject traditional or organized religion but have strong metaphysical beliefs The SBNR may be included under the definition of nonreligion but are sometimes classified as a wholly distinct group Theological noncognitivism is the argument that religious language specifically words such as God are not cognitively meaningful It is sometimes considered synonymous with ignosticism Transtheism refers to a system of thought or religious philosophy that is neither theistic nor atheistic but beyond them HistoryIn the early 1970s Colin Campbell began a sociological study of irreligion 13 Human rightsIn 1993 the United Nations Human Rights Committee declared that article 18 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights protects theistic non theistic and atheistic beliefs as well as the right not to profess any religion or belief The committee further stated that the freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief necessarily entails the freedom to choose a religion or belief including the right to replace one s current religion or belief with another or to adopt atheistic views Signatories to the convention are barred from the use of threat of physical force or penal sanctions to compel believers or non believers to recant their beliefs or convert Most democracies protect the freedom of religion or belief and it is largely implied in respective legal systems that those who do not believe or observe any religion are allowed freedom of thought A noted exception to ambiguity explicitly allowing non religion is Article 36 of the Constitution of China as adopted in 1982 which states that No state organ public organization or individual may compel citizens to believe in or not believe in any religion nor may they discriminate against citizens who believe in or do not believe in any religion Article 46 of China s 1978 Constitution was even more explicit stating that Citizens enjoy freedom to believe in religion and freedom not to believe in religion and to propagate atheism DemographicsNonreligious population by country in 2010 Women when in the labor force are similar to men in their religiosity When out of the labor force women tend to be more religious In many countries censuses and demographic surveys do not separate atheists agnostics and those responding nothing in particular as distinct populations 60 Eleven countries have nonreligious majorities In 2020 the countries with the highest percentage of Non Religious Term encompassing both a agnostics and b atheists were North Korea the Czech Republic and Estonia According to the 2018 Chinese General Social Survey the country had the largest count of unaffiliated people about one billion adults Some broadly religious practices continue to play a significant role in the lives of a substantial shares of the Chinese population Determining objective irreligion as part of societal or individual levels of secularity and religiosity requires a high degree of cultural sensitivity from researchers This is especially so outside the Western world where the concepts of religious and secular are not necessarily rooted in local culture or even exist 31 34 Cultural religion is a vivid reality 59 It must be taken into account when trying to ascertain the numeric strength of atheism and agnosticism in a country 59 It is generally not considered more important than self identification measures 59 Non religious people can be found in religious categories 59 This is especially the case where religion has very deep seated religious roots in a culture such as with Christianity in Europe Islam in the Middle East Hinduism in India and Buddhism in South east Asia 59 For instance Scandinavian countries have among the highest measures of nonreligiosity and even atheism in Europe For example 58 of the Swedish population identify with the Church of Sweden Yet 47 of atheists who live in those countries are still formally members of the national churches In much of East Asia ritual behavior holds greater salience than belief 31 China has state atheism and is a Leninist religious state which maintains dominance over all other religions 1 About 85 of its population practice various kinds of religious behaviors with some regularity 2 Many East Asians identify as without religion wu zōngjiao in Chinese mu shukyō in Japanese mu jong gyo in Korean but religion in that context refers only to Buddhism or Christianity Most of the people without religion practice Shinto and other folk religions In the Muslim world those who claim to be not religious mostly imply not strictly observing Islam and in Israel being secular means not strictly observing Orthodox Judaism Vice versa many American Jews share the worldviews of nonreligious people though affiliated with a Jewish denomination and in Russia growing identification with Eastern Orthodoxy is mainly motivated by cultural and nationalist considerations without much concrete belief In the United States the majority of the Nones those without a religious affiliation have belief in a god or higher power spiritual forces beyond the natural world and souls Even 23 of self identified atheists believe in a higher power but not a god as described in the bible In 2016 Zuckerman Galen and Pasquale estimated there were 400 million nonreligious or nontheistic people In their 2013 essay Ariela Keysar and Juhem Navarro Rivera estimated there were about 450 to 500 million nonbelievers including both positive and negative atheists or approximately 7 of the world population These estimates come from the International Social Survey Programme 2008 survey in which 40 countries took part In 2010 the religiously unaffiliated numbered more than 1 1 billion around 1 126 500 000 persons about one in six people 16 3 of an estimated 6 9 billion world population according to Pew Research Center 24 25 In Pew reports unaffiliated are atheists agnostics and people who checked nothing in particular 60 76 of them resided in one of the six regions Asia Pacific 25 A 2012 WIN Gallup International report on a poll from 57 countries reported that 59 of the world s population identified as a religious person 23 as not a religious person 13 as convinced atheists and also a 9 decrease in identification as religious when compared to the 2005 average from 39 countries A 2015 WIN Gallup International poll found that 63 of the globe identified as a religious person 22 as not a religious person and 11 as convinced atheists Their 2016 survey found that 62 of the globe identified as a religious person less than 25 as not a religious person 9 others as convinced atheists and 5 others Do not know no response Keysar and Navarro Rivera advised caution with these figures since other surveys have consistently reached lower figures for the number of atheists worldwide 553 554 Inverse association between intelligence and religiosity and the inverse correlation between intelligence and fertility might lead to a decline in non religious identity contra secularization hypothesis in the foreseeable future 2 In 2007 sociologist Phil Zuckerman s global studies on atheism have indicated that global atheism may be in decline due to irreligious countries having the lowest birth rates in the world and religious countries having higher birth rates in general A Pew 2015 global projection study for religion and nonreligion projected that between 2010 and 2050 there will be some initial increases of the unaffiliated followed by a decline by 2050 Some theorists think religion will fade away but Pew reveals a more complicated picture Pew predicts the unaffiliated share of the world population will decrease at least for a while from 16 4 to 13 2 by 2050 Pew states that religious areas are experiencing the fastest growth because of higher fertility and younger populations By 2060 Pew says the number of unaffiliated will increase by over 35 million but the overall population percentage will decrease to 13 because the total population will grow faster This would be mostly because of relatively old age and low fertility rates in less religious societies such as East Asia particularly China and Japan but also Western Europe By 2019 43 out of 49 countries studied continued to become less religious 110 Relatively few unbelievers select Atheist or Agnostic as their preferred non religious or secular identity 3 Being nonreligious is not necessarily equivalent to being an atheist or agnostic Many of the nonreligious have some religious beliefs 24 Also some of the unaffiliated engage in certain kinds of religious practices 24 For example belief in God or a higher power is shared by 7 of Chinese unaffiliated adults 30 of French unaffiliated adults and 68 of unaffiliated U S adults 24 Being unaffiliated with a religion on polls does not automatically mean objectively nonreligious since there are for example unaffiliated people who fall under religious measures just as some unbelievers may still attend a church or other place of worship pages needed Out of the global nonreligious population 76 2 reside in Asia Pacific while the remainder reside in Europe 12 North America 5 2 Latin America and the Caribbean 4 sub Saharan Africa 2 4 and the Middle East and North Africa 0 2 24 By population The Pew Research Center in the table below reflects religiously unaffiliated in 2010 which include atheists agnostics and people who do not identify with any particular religion in surveys The Zuckerman data on the table below only reflect the number of people who have an absence of belief in a deity only atheists agnostics These do not include the broader number of people who do not identify with a particular religion such as deists pantheists and spiritual but not religious people Country Pew 2012 Zuckerman 2004 Mainland China 700 680 000 103 907 840 181 838 720 India 102 870 000 Japan 72 120 000 81 493 120 82 766 450 Vietnam 26 040 000 66 978 900 Russia 23 180 000 34 507 680 69 015 360 Germany 20 350 000 33 794 250 40 388 250 France 17 580 000 25 982 320 32 628 960 United Kingdom 18 684 010 26 519 240 South Korea 22 350 000 14 579 400 25 270 960 Ukraine 9 546 400 United States 50 980 000 8 790 840 26 822 520 Netherlands 6 364 020 7 179 920 Canada 6 176 520 9 752 400 Spain 6 042 150 9 667 440 Taiwan 5 460 000 Hong Kong 5 240 000 Czech Republic 5 328 940 6 250 121 Australia 4 779 120 4 978 250 Belgium 4 346 160 4 449 640 Sweden 4 133 560 7 638 100 Italy 3 483 420 8 708 550 North Korea 17 350 000 3 404 700 Hungary 3 210 240 4 614 720 Bulgaria 2 556 120 3 007 200 Denmark 2 327 590 4 330 400 Turkey 1 956 990 6 320 550 Belarus 1 752 870 Greece 1 703 680 Kazakhstan 1 665 840 1 817 280 Argentina 1 565 800 3 131 600 Austria 1 471 500 2 125 500 Finland 1 460 200 3 129 000 Norway 1 418 250 3 294 000 Switzerland 1 266 670 2 011 770 Israel 929 850 2 293 630 New Zealand 798 800 878 680 Cuba 791 630 Slovenia 703 850 764 180 Estonia 657 580 Dominican Republic 618 380 Singapore 566 020 Slovakia 542 400 1 518 720 Lithuania 469 040 Latvia 461 200 668 740 Portugal 420 960 947 160 Armenia 118 740 Uruguay 407 880 Kyrgyzstan 355 670 Croatia 314 790 Albania 283 600 Mongolia 247 590 Iceland 47 040 67 620 Brazil 15 410 000Historical trendsSince 2007 there has been a sharp trend away from religion From about 2007 to 2019 43 out of 49 countries studied became less religious Past influential thinkers from Karl Marx to Max Weber to Emile Durkheim thought that the spread of scientific knowledge would dispel religion throughout the world 112 Industrialization also didn t cause religion to disappear 110 Political scientists Ronald Inglehart and Pippa Norris argue faith is more emotional than cognitive and both advance an alternative thesis termed existential security They postulate that rather than knowledge or ignorance of scientific learning it is the weakness or vulnerability of a society that determines religiosity They claim that increased poverty and chaos make religious values more important to a society while wealth and security diminish its role As need for religious support diminishes there is less willingness to accept its constraints including keeping women in the kitchen and gay people in the closet Prior to the 1980s Rates of people identifying as non religious began rising in most societies at least as early as the turn of the 20th century In 1968 sociologist Glenn M Vernon wrote that US census respondents who identified as no religion were insufficiently defined because they were defined in terms of a negative He contrasted the label with the term independent for political affiliation which still includes people who participate in civic activities He suggested this difficulty in definition was partially due to the dilemma of defining religious activity beyond membership attendance or other identification with a formal religious group During the 1970s social scientists still tended to describe irreligion from a perspective that considered religion as normative for humans Irreligion was described in terms of hostility reactivity or indifference toward religion and or as developing from radical theologies 1981 2019 This section relies largely or entirely upon a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources at this section July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message In a study of religious trends in 49 countries they contained 60 percent of the world s population from 1981 to 2007 Inglehart and Norris found an overall but not universal increase in religiosity 110 Respondents in 33 of 49 countries rated themselves higher on a scale from one to ten when asked how important God was in their lives This increase occurred in most former communist and developing countries Most high income countries became less religious 112 A sharp reversal of the global trend occurred from 2007 to 2019 when 43 out of 49 countries studied became less religious This reversal appeared across most of the world The decline in belief was not confined to high income countries and appeared across most of the world In virtually every high income country religion has continued to decline 112 At the same time many poor countries together with most of the former communist states have also become less religious 112 From 2007 to 2019 only five countries became more religious whereas the vast majority of the countries studied moved in the opposite direction 112 India is the most important exception to the general pattern of declining religiosity 112 The United States was a dramatic example of declining religiosity with the mean rating of importance of religion dropping from 8 2 to 4 6 while India was a major exception Research in 1989 recorded disparities in religious adherence for different faith groups with people from Christian and tribal traditions leaving religion at a greater rate than those from Muslim Hindu or Buddhist faiths Inglehart and Norris speculate that the decline in religiosity comes from a decline in the social need for traditional gender and sexual norms virtually all world religions instilled pro fertility norms such as producing as many children as possible and discouraged divorce abortion homosexuality contraception and any sexual behavior not linked to reproduction in their adherents for centuries as life expectancy rose and infant mortality dropped They also argue that the idea that religion was necessary to prevent a collapse of social cohesion and public morality was belied by lower levels of corruption and murder in less religious countries They argue that both of these trends are based on the theory that as societies develop survival becomes more secure starvation once pervasive becomes uncommon life expectancy increases murder and other forms of violence diminish As this level of security rises there is less social economic need for the high birthrates that religion encourages and less emotional need for the comfort of religious belief Change in acceptance of divorce abortion and homosexuality has been measured by the World Values Survey and shown to have grown throughout the world outside of Muslim majority countries Several very comprehensive surveys in the Middle East and Iran have come to similar conclusions there is an increase in secularization and growing calls for reforms in religious political institutions See alsoApostasy Faith deconstruction Growth of religion Importance of religion by country Infidel Layicite Pantheism Secular religion AtheismReferencesEldridge Stephen irreligion In Duignan Brian ed Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Archived from the original on 1 September 2024 Retrieved 1 December 2024 Resources Overview Explaining Atheism Queen s University Belfast 15 January 2025 Retrieved 15 January 2025 The Nonreligious Understanding Secular People and Societies Oxford Academic Oxford University Press 2016 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199924950 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 992495 0 Retrieved 14 December 2024 Zuckerman Phil Galen Luke W Pasquale Frank L 24 March 2016 The Nonreligious Understanding Secular People and Societies Oxford University Press p 226 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199924950 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 992495 0 Retrieved 14 December 2024 Inglehart Ronald F 11 August 2020 Giving Up on God The Global Decline of Religion Foreign Affairs pp 110 118 Archived from the original on 22 September 2020 Retrieved 1 December 2024 Inglehart Ronald 20 February 2021 Giving Up on God The Global Decline of Religion Revisited World Values Survey World Values Survey Association Retrieved 1 December 2024 Conclusion Oxford Academic Oxford University Press 2016 pp 223 226 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199924950 003 0012 ISBN 978 0 19 992495 0 Retrieved 14 December 2024 Ellis Lee Hoskin Anthony W Dutton Edward Nyborg Helmuth 8 March 2017 The Future of Secularism a Biologically Informed Theory Supplemented with Cross Cultural Evidence Evolutionary Psychological Science 3 3 224 242 doi 10 1007 s40806 017 0090 z Retrieved 22 December 2024 Inglehart Ronald 10 December 2020 Religion s Sudden Decline Why It s Happening and What Comes Next Center for Political Studies CPS University of Michigan Institute for Social Research Retrieved 14 December 2024 Key Findings From the Global Religious Futures Project Pew Research Center 21 December 2022 Retrieved 1 December 2024 Hackett Conrad 13 June 2018 The Age Gap in Religion Around the World PDF Pew Research Center Retrieved 7 December 2024 Eller Jack 2010 What is Atheism In Zuckerman Phil ed Atheism and Secularity Santa Barbara Calif Praeger pp 12 13 ISBN 9780313351839 Chaves Mark March 2010 Rain Dances in the Dry Season 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171 06863 1 Dillon Michele 2015 Christian Affiliation and Disaffiliation in the United States Generational and Cultural Change In Hunt Stephen J ed Handbook of Global Contemporary Christianity Themes and Developments in Culture Politics and Society Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 10 Leiden Brill Publishers pp 346 365 doi 10 1163 9789004291027 019 ISBN 978 90 04 26538 7 ISSN 1874 6691 Eller Jack David 2010 What Is Atheism In Zuckerman Phil ed Atheism and Secularity Volume 1 Issues Concepts Definitions Santa Barbara California Praeger pp 1 18 ISBN 978 0 313 35183 9 2017 Varieties of Secular Experience In Zuckerman Phil Shook John R eds The Oxford Handbook of Secularism New York Oxford University Press pp 499ff doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199988457 013 31 ISBN 978 0 19 998845 7 Glasner Peter E 1977 The Sociology of Secularisation A Critique of a Concept London Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0 7100 8455 2 Iversen Hans Raun 2013 Secularization Secularity Secularism In Runehov Anne L C Oviedo Lluis eds Encyclopedia of Sciences and Religions Dordrecht Netherlands Springer pp 2116 2121 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 8265 8 1024 ISBN 978 1 4020 8265 8 Josephson Jason Ananda 2012 The Invention of Religion in Japan Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226412337 Lois Lee Secular or nonreligious Investigating and interpreting generic not religious categories and populations Archived 28 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine Religion Vol 44 no 3 October 2013 Mullins Mark R 2011 Religion in Contemporary Japanese Lives In Lyon Bestor Victoria Bestor Theodore C Yamagata Akiko eds Routledge Handbook of Japanese Culture and Society Abingdon England Routledge pp 63 74 ISBN 978 0 415 43649 6 Schaffner Caleb Cragun Ryan T 2020 Chapter 20 Non Religion and Atheism In Enstedt Daniel Larsson Goran Mantsinen Teemu T eds Handbook of Leaving Religion Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion Vol 18 Leiden Brill Publishers pp 242 252 doi 10 1163 9789004331471 021 ISBN 978 90 04 33092 4 ISSN 1874 6691 Archived from the original on 2 June 2021 Retrieved 29 May 2021 Smith James K A 2014 How Not to Be Secular Reading Charles Tayor Grand Rapids Michigan Wm B Eerdmans Publishing Co ISBN 978 0 8028 6761 2 Taylor Charles 2007 A Secular Age Cambridge Massachusetts Belknap Press ISBN 978 0 674 02676 6 2011 Why We Need a Radical Redefinition of Secularism In Mendieta Eduardo VanAntwerpen Jonathan eds The Power of Religion in the Public Sphere New York Columbia University Press pp 34 59 ISBN 978 0 231 52725 5 JSTOR 10 7312 butl15645 6 Warner Michael VanAntwerpen Jonathan Calhoun Craig eds 2010 Varieties of Secularism in a Secular Age Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 04857 7 Zuckerman Phil Galen Luke W Pasquale Frank L 2016 Secularity Around the World The Nonreligious Understanding Secular People and Societies New York Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780199924950 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 992494 3 Zuckerman Phil Shook John R 2017 Introduction The Study of Secularism In Zuckerman Phil Shook John R eds The Oxford Handbook of Secularism New York Oxford University Press pp 1 17 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199988457 013 1 ISBN 978 0 19 998845 7 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Irreligion NotesDepending on whether or not the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macau and or Taiwan are included in the population statistics of China The table in the transcluded source excludes all three referring to the population of Mainland China only The Understanding Unbelief program in the University of Kent Will religion ever disappear from BBC Future by Rachel Nuwer in December 2014Portals PhilosophyReligion

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