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Atheism in Five Minutes

Edited by
Teemu Taira [+–]
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.

Atheism in Five Minutes offers insights into a number of commonly held questions about the ideas, practices and attitudes concerning atheism and atheists. The volume highlights approaches based on the study of religion, sociology, history, anthropology, politics and psychology. It also examines the implications and assumptions in common questions about atheism. Ideal for both classroom use and personal study, some of the questions asked include: Are atheists immoral? Are children born atheist? Do atheists have rituals? How has atheism related to politics? Why do some atheists remain members of religious groups? Is it difficult to be an atheist in Muslim countries? Do atheist parents have atheist children? Why are there so few black atheists? What are the most atheistic societies? Has the Internet made atheism more popular?

Each essay is based on the latest research written by a leading scholar in the field. They offer concise and thoughtful answers along with suggestions for further reading.

Because each chapter can be read in about five minutes, the books offer ideal supplementary resources in classrooms or an engaging read for those curious about the world around them.

Series: Religion in 5 Minutes

Table of Contents

Preface

Preface xi-xiii
Teemu Taira
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.

Conceptual and Historical Issues

1. What Does the Term “Atheism” Mean? [+–] 3-6
Nathan G. Alexander
Independent Scholar
Nathan G. Alexander is a writer and historian from Canada. He is the author of Race in a Godless World: Atheism, Race, and Civilization, 1850-1914 (NYU Press/Manchester University Press, 2019).
This chapter first looks at the ancient Greek roots of the word “atheism,” and raises questions about both the “a-“ and the “theism” parts of the word. Next, the chapter considers the word’s various definitions through history and the distinction between “positive” and “negative” atheism. Finally, the chapter examines how we should decide which definition of “atheism” to choose.
2. What Is the Difference Between “Atheism”, “Agnosticism”, “Nonreligion” and “Secular”? [+–] 7-10
Christopher R. Cotter
The Open University
Christopher Cotter is Staff Tutor (Lecturer) in Sociology & Religious Studies at The Open University. He is co-founder of The Religious Studies Project, co-editor of After World Religions: Reconstructing Religious Studies (Routledge, 2016) and author of The Critical Study of Non-Religion: Discourse, Identification, Locality (Bloomsbury, 2020).
This chapter introduces three terms—“agnosticism,” “nonreligion,” and “secular”—which are entangled with the concept of “atheism” before mapping their similarities and differences in different contexts. The take-home message throughout should be that difference is in the eye of the beholder and depends on who is utilizing the terms and for what purpose.
3. Why Have Researchers Become Interested in Atheism? [+–] 11-14
Stephen Bullivant
St Mary’s University, UK
Stephen Bullivant is Professor of Theology and the Sociology of Religion at St Mary’s University, UK. His books include The Oxford Dictionary of Atheism (co-authored with
Lois Lee), The Oxford Handbook of Atheism, and The Cambridge History of Atheism (both co- edited with Michael Ruse).
Up until fifteen years ago, atheism and related topics had received only scant, partial, and rare attention from social scientists. Now there’s a thriving community of researchers, a slew of books and articles, two dedicated journals, regular international conferences, and several five- and six-figure research projects. Why the sudden interest? And why the previous lack of interest? What changed, how, and when?
4. Are Researchers of Atheism Promoting Atheism? [+–] 15-18
Lois Lee
University of Kent
Lois Lee is Senior Lecturer in Religious Studies at the University of Kent.
Researchers always negotiate their own beliefs and values when they conduct research, and this issue is particularly acute around religious and nonreligious worldviews, which, like political convictions, often attract strong feelings. This chapter explores whether and how researchers achieve neutrality in their work.
5. What Are the Most Common Ways to Study Atheism? [+–] 19-22
Lois Lee
University of Kent
Lois Lee is Senior Lecturer in Religious Studies at the University of Kent.
The twenty-first century has seen a profound transformation in how atheism is thought about and studied by researchers. This chapter describes the shift from religion- to atheism-centred methodologies and how this has expanded and altered not only what we want to know about atheism but how we go about finding it out.
6. How Should Atheism Be Measured? [+–] 23-25
Ryan Cragun
University of Tampa
Ryan T. Cragun, Ryan T. Cragun is a professor of sociology at The University of Tampa. His research focuses on Mormonism and the nonreligious and has been published in various
scholarly journals. He is also the author of several books.
Knowing how to measure atheism requires a clear understanding of atheism. Atheism is the absence of belief in a god, gods, or higher powers. Questions to measure atheism can measure whether someone believes in a specific god, in any gods, or in any higher powers. Additional questions may attempt to capture confidence in one’s atheism or whether or not one believes that it is possible to develop knowledge about a god, which would measure agnosticism. Finally, asking whether people have heard about specific gods and reject the existence of gods or simply have not heard about a god would allow for a measure of positive or negative atheism.
7. When Did It Become Possible to Identify as an Atheist? [+–] 26-29
Gavin Hyman
University of Lancaster
Gavin Hyman is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion, University of Lancaster, UK. He has written widely on atheism and on the philosophy of
religion more generally, including A Short History of Atheism (2010).
This chapter looks as the emergence of the term atheism, its original meaning, and its subsequent development into a defintion recognisable by us in the contemporary world. It also examines the process by which it was adopted as a term of self-definiton.
8. Who Are the Most Famous Atheists? [+–] 30-33
Christopher R. Cotter
The Open University
Christopher Cotter is Staff Tutor (Lecturer) in Sociology & Religious Studies at The Open University. He is co-founder of The Religious Studies Project, co-editor of After World Religions: Reconstructing Religious Studies (Routledge, 2016) and author of The Critical Study of Non-Religion: Discourse, Identification, Locality (Bloomsbury, 2020).
Who decides who is “famous”, and how might we assess varying degrees of fame? Does the title of this chapter refer to people who are famous for being atheists? People who are famous for other reasons but who are also atheists? Or those who are important to the history of atheism but who might not have (been) identified as atheists? Are we interested in fame among atheists or among general populations? This chapter will highlight some “famous atheists” from a variety of sociohistorical contexts while attempting to address some of these questions.
9. Was Darwin an Atheist? [+–] 34-36
Bernard Lightman
York University, Canada
Bernard Lightman is Distinguished Research Professor in the Humanities Department at York University, and Past President of the History of Science Society.  Lightman’s research focuses on the cultural history of Victorian science.  Among his most recent publications
are the edited collections The Metaphysical Society (co-edited with Catherine Marshall and Richard England), Rethinking History, Science and Religion, and Science Periodicals in Nineteenth Century Britain (co-edited with Gowan Dawson, Sally Shuttleworth, and Jonathan Topham).  He is currently working on a book on science, religion, and Victorian periodicals, and is one of the general editors of the John Tyndall Correspondence Project, an international collaborative effort to obtain, digitalize, transcribe, and publish all surviving letters to and from Tyndall.  He is also editor of the
book series “Science and Nineteenth Century Culture,” which, like the Tyndall Correspondence, is published by the University of Pittsburgh Press.
Contemporary atheists like to claim Darwin as one of their own. However the story of the evolution of Darwin’s religious views confirms that he was never an atheist, even when he raised the most difficult questions about how humans can know that a God exists.
10. Have All Great Scientists Been Atheists? [+–] 37-40
Aku Visala
University of Helsinki
Aku Visala (PhD, Philosophy of Religion) is a Research Fellow of the Finnish Academy at the University of Helsinki, Finland. He has held postdoctoral positions at the universities of Oxford (UK), Princeton (USA), and Notre Dame (USA). His work is located at the crossroads of analytic philosophy, theology, and the cognitive sciences.
Most great scientists have not been atheists. Many early modern great scientists, like Johannes Kepler (1571-1630) and Robert Boyle (1627-1691) were Christians. Up until the 20th century, most scientists have held standard or non-standard religious, mostly Christian, beliefs. In the last hundred years or so, the sciences have gone through a process of secularization, which has produced many great scientists, who are atheists. However, some great scientists are still religious.
11. What Is New Atheism? [+–] 41-43
Christopher R. Cotter
The Open University
Christopher Cotter is Staff Tutor (Lecturer) in Sociology & Religious Studies at The Open University. He is co-founder of The Religious Studies Project, co-editor of After World Religions: Reconstructing Religious Studies (Routledge, 2016) and author of The Critical Study of Non-Religion: Discourse, Identification, Locality (Bloomsbury, 2020).
“New Atheism” is a term that emerged at the beginning of the twenty-first century. It can refer to a variety of things, from specific works of particular (white male) authors, to a much broader discursive movement. Just how “new” this form of atheism is, and what impact it might have had, or continue to have, remain open questions and depend on who is doing the asking.
12. Are There Atheistic Religions? [+–] 44-47
Teemu Taira
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.
This chapter discusses whether the concept of atheistic religion makes sense and in what conditions. It suggests that the question about atheistic religions raises another, perhaps more interesting question: “What is at stake when people make claims about some religion being atheistic?”
13. Were There Atheists in Ancient Greece and Rome? [+–] 48-51
Ramón Soneira Martínez
University of Erfurt
Ramón Soneira Martínez is a doctoral researcher in Religious Studies at the Max Weber Centre for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies of the University of Erfurt (Germany). His research interests lie in the study of atheism and unbelief in different historical contexts, particularly in Classical Athens.
Historical studies on atheism have opened the debate to analyse atheistic positions in “pre-modern” historical contexts. This chapter continues that path by questioning whether we can observe “atheists” in the Greco-Roman context. This exercise cannot be carried out without questioning the concepts we currently have associated with atheism. Having discussed the differences between modern and ancient terms, we can now venture to analyse atheistic positions in the ancient world. Did the word “atheist” exist in the Greek and Latin language? Were there people who identified themselves as “atheists”? Were there movements that questioned the existence of gods in the Greek philosophical schools? The chapter gives a succinct answer to all these questions.
14. What Is the Relationship Between Judaism and Atheism? [+–] 52-55
Daniel Langton
University of Manchester
Daniel Langton is Professor of Jewish History at the University of Manchester. Relevant publications include Discourses of Doubt: The Place of Atheism, Scepticism and Infidelity in Nineteenth-Century North American Reform Jewish Thought (2018) and Normative Judaism? (2012). He was an AHRC Leadership Fellow for a project entitled The Doubting Jew: Atheism, Jewish Thought and Interfaith Relations’ in 2016–17.
Jewish conceptions of, and attitudes towards, atheism have changed over time. Jewish biblical tradition tended to be concerned more about practical, rather than philosophical, atheism. In the Talmud, heretics were often condemned for atheistic tendencies, such the belief in God’s existence or unity, or for a loss of faith due to the problem evil as in the case of Acher. The great medieval authority Maimonides asserted that atheistic ideas could lead to loss of one’s place in the World to Come, even as his own naturalistic teachings on prophecy and miracles and God’s unknowability, prepared the ground for later Jewish scepticism. In the early-modern period it became possible for highly heterodox Jews such as Spinzoa to emerge; later non-believing Jews would be regarded as atheists for denying the authority of scripture, divine creation, divine providence, and even the divine origins of morality. In the modern period, non-Jewish Jews are commonplace, rejecting supernaturalism as part of the rejection of traditional religious authority and the idea that their Jewishness should be defined in terms of religion.
15. Why Has Buddhism Been Perceived as Atheistic? [+–] 56-59
Jens Schlieter
University of Bern
Jens Schlieter is a Professor in Institute for the Science of Religion and Central Asian Studies, University of Bern. Being trained in Western Philosophy, Comparative Religion, and Buddhist Studies, his work comprises contributions on the history of religions (especially Indian and Tibetan Buddhism, discourse on religious experiences in the West), the Western Reception of Buddhist Thoughts and Practices, and on Bioethical Discourse of Buddhism. Methodological contributions include Conceptual Metaphor Theory and Philosophy of Language, applied to the Study of Religion, and Cognitive Science of Religion.
Although there is no direct equivalent of “atheism” in pre-modern Asian languages, early and medieval Indian sources of the Hindu traditions declare Buddhism to be “non-theistic,” and, indeed, Buddhists themselves declared that God, or gods, are largely irrelevant if the aim is to reach final liberation from suffering. This harmonizes with the philosophical view of Buddhist scholars that reality, and even the reality of Gods, is illusionary and inaccessible. On the other hand, in various Buddhist traditions gods or other supernatural beings have significance. So, why has Buddhism been declared to be atheistic? The contribution will move on to look into the early European missionary sources that declared Buddhism to be a “cult of nothingness,” followed by some remarks on European philosophers’ comments of Buddhism as atheism. Finally, in the surge of Western empirical sciences, Buddhist converts and Asian Buddhist modernists themselves declared Buddhism to be atheism, or, at least, compatible with a scientific naturalism. The latest move are Western Buddhists that explicitly aim to transform Buddhism into a belief-free “Atheism” (e.g.,Steven Batchelor), which will subsequently be contrasted with less ambitious or confrontative projects of Eastern Buddhist modernists such as the current Dalai Lama.
16. What Is Christian Atheism? [+–] 60-63
Gavin Hyman
University of Lancaster
Gavin Hyman is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Politics, Philosophy and Religion, University of Lancaster, UK. He has written widely on atheism and on the philosophy of
religion more generally, including A Short History of Atheism (2010).
This chapter looks at the origins of the Christian atheism movement in the USA in the 1960s. It also looks at later variants, particularly Christian non-realism in the UK in the 1980s, as well as more recent usages of the term in a sociological context.
17. What Does Islam Teach About Atheism? [+–] 64-66
Ilkka Lindstedt
University of Helsinki
Ilkka Lindstedt is University Lecturer in Islamic Theology at the University of Helsinki. He has worked on early Islamic history and classical Arabic literature. Recent publications include “Who Is in, Who Is out? Early Muslim Identity through Epigraphy and Theory,” Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 46 (2019): 147–246 as well as a chapter on the medieval Islamic world in The Cambridge History of Atheism.
The chapter surveys the ways in which the Qur’an engages with notions of disbelief. The Qur’an and its exegetes did not really consider the possibility of atheism per se, although they did reflect on various facets of kufr, “disbelief,” and shirk, “associating other beings with God.” Moreover, the chapter presents a prominent medieval Muslim freethinker, Ibn al-Rawandi, who vehemently criticized aspects of formalized religion, though he cannot necessarily be called an atheist.
18. Is It Difficult to Be an Atheist in Muslim Countries? [+–] 67-70
Karin van Nieuwkerk
Radboud University
Karin van Nieuwkerk is a Professor in Islam Studies, Radboud University.
In order to answer this question, we need to unpack it. What is meant by Muslim countries? What is meant by atheism in the context of Muslim countries? Is it difficult to be or to show non-belief? What kind of difficulties and consequences might atheists experience? Atheism is a sensitive issue, even more so for women, but not in all countries, not for everyone to the same extent, and also depending on whether, how and where you disclose your nonreligion. Yet despite it being difficult, there appears to be a growing number of people who identify as atheists in many Muslim countries.
19. Are Pagans and Satanists Really Atheists? [+–] 71-74
Jesper Aagaard Petersen
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Associate Professor and Head of Research, Department of Teacher Education
To answer the question of the relation between Pagans, Satanists and Atheists, the chapter unpacks implicit assumptions, reductive judgments and conflations of the three. It then examines atheism and anti-theism as found within Pagan and Satanic milieux. Neither Pagans nor Satanists are merely atheists; atheists are not necessarily heathens or Satanists either.
20. What Kind of Dialogue Is There Between Atheists and Religious People? [+–] 75-78
Paul Hedges
RSIS, Nanyang Technological University
View Website
Paul Hedges is Associate Professor in Interreligious Studies at the Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. His work focuses on interreligious studies, relations, and theologies, as well as theory and method in the study of religion. He has published, or has in print, a dozen books and over sixty academic papers.
Taking a critical stance towards the terms “atheists”, “religious people”, and “dialogue” this chapter explores what kind of interaction might be termed “interworldview dialogue”. It notes various examples of exchanges using the fourfold typology of dialogue (life, action, theological exchange, religious experience) as a frame to consider a variety of encounters of more or less irenic or polemical interaction.
21. Is Atheism a Religion, Belief-System or a World View? [+–] 79-82
Paul-Francois Tremlett
Open University
View Website
Paul-François Tremlett is a senior lecturer in religious studies at the Open University. His research interests include classical and contemporary anthropological and sociological theories of religion and the broad constitution of religion as a site of study in societies experiencing rapid social change. He is the author of Towards a New Theory of Religion and Social Change: Sovereignties and Disruptions (Bloomsbury 2021) and co-edited Ritual and Democracy: Protests, Publics and Performances (Equinox, 2020). He also co-edits the Bloomsbury Series ‘Religion, Space and Place’.
In this chapter, the question ‘Is Atheism a Religion, Belief-System or a Worldview?’ is treated as a thought experiment conducted to enable critical reflection upon the word “atheism” through juxtaposition with other terms, rather than as an opportunity for delineating boundaries and definitions.

Society, Politics and Media

22. What Are the Most Atheistic Societies? [+–] 85-87
Isabella Kasselstrand
University of Aberdeen
Isabella Kasselstrand is a Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Aberdeen. Using quantitative and mixed methods, her research examines secularization and nonreligion in northern Europe and the United States.
This chapter uses data from the World Values Survey, the European Values Study, and the International Social Survey Program to identify the most atheistic societies in the world. This is accomplished by examining levels of (1) self-defined atheism and (2) nonbelief in God. The chapter also explains how these measures differ at the cross-national scale.
23. Why Are Some Societies More Atheistic Than Others? [+–] 88-91
Teemu Taira
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.
There are several competing and complementary theories of why some societies are more atheistic than others. Some theories propose that there are universal explanatory mechanisms or at least correlation between the level of atheism and social structure, whereas other theories suggest that historical reasons are most plausible in answering the question.
24. Has the Internet Made Atheism More Popular? [+–] 92-95
Teemu Taira
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.
Scholars are somewhat divided in their assessments of whether the internet enhances secularization or opens up new areas for religions to flourish. This chapter suggest that the internet itself might be seen as a medium that advances secularization, at least to a moderate degree. Moreover, atheists have found the internet to be very beneficial to them. This is even more the case in countries where atheism and its public expressions are forbidden or repressed.
25. What Makes Atheists Different from the Rest of the Population, If Anything? [+–] 96-99
Teemu Taira
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.
On the basis on quantitative and qualitative studies, this chapter clarifies how atheists in general differ from others in terms of age, gender, education, political preferences and other sociodemographic characteristics.
26. Are Atheists Typically Young People? [+–] 100-104
Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme,Joel Thiessen
University of Waterloo
Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Legal Studies at the University of Waterloo (Canada). She completed her DPhil (PhD equivalent) in sociology at the University of Oxford in 2015. Her research interests include
quantitative methods, sociology of religion, immigration and ethnicity and political sociology. Dr. Wilkins-Laflamme currently has 16 articles published in top Canadian and international peer-reviewed journals in the fields of sociology of religion, religious studies and political science, including the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Canadian Review of Political Science, Sociology of Religion, Canadian Review of Sociology, Studies in Religion, and the British Journal of Sociology. She is co-author of the 2020 book None of the Above: Nonreligious Identity in the U.S. and Canada, with New York University Press.
Ambrose University
Joel Thiessen is Professor of Sociology and Director of the Flourishing Congregations Institute at Ambrose University in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. His research interests include religious nones, congregations, millennials, and religion in Canada. Along with nearly a
dozen peer-reviewed articles, he has published four books, including None of the Above:
Nonreligious Identity in the US and Canada (with Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme) and Millennial
Mosaic: How Pluralism and Choice are Shaping Canadian Youth and the Future of Canada (with Reginald Bibby and Monetta Bailey). For more information, see www.joelthiessen.ca.
In the majority of countries worldwide, a larger proportion of young people do not believe in God or a Higher Power, compared with older generations. Not all atheists are currently young people, but a higher proportion are. This demographic phenomenon is mainly explained in the secular transition framework by generational change and replacement.
27. Why Are Men More Likely to Be Atheists Than Women? 105-108
Tiina Mahlamäki
University of Turku
Tiina Mahlamäki is senior lecturer in the study of religion, University of Turku, Finland. She has published several articles about atheism and gender.
28. Why Are There So Few Black Atheists? [+–] 109-112
Daniel Swann
Goucher College and University of Maryland College Park
Daniel Swann is a professor at Goucher College and University of Maryland College Park. He received his PhD in sociology from the University of Maryland in 2017. He has since gone on to write two books; one of which A qualitative study on Black Atheists: Don’t Tell Me You’re One of those is one of the first qualitative studies done on this intersectional group.
There are so few Black Atheists in the United States for a number of reasons. The factors that tend to correlate with being Atheist in America tend to negatively correlate with Black Americans (ie: income, education level, exposure to other Atheists). This coupled with the historical centrality and importance of the ‘Black Church’ to Black America as a whole, and the stigma against Atheists that arose as a result, begin to explain why there are so few Black Atheists in The United States.
29. Does Migration Make People Less Religious? [+–] 113-116
Tuomas Martikainen
University of Eastern Finland
Tuomas Martikainen is a Senior Researcher at the University of Eastern Finland. He has done research on migrant integration and religions.
The chapter looks at the role of migration for religiosity. Migration tends to make people sensitive for their own beliefs and opens a window of opportunity for change. The new social environment affects migrants, but equally important is the society’s inclusiveness. Repressed group may hold to their previous views, whereas others tend to become more like the majority population.
30. How Has Atheism Related to Politics? [+–] 117-120
Steven Kettell
University of Warwick
Steven Kettell is an Associate Professor in Politics and International Studies in the Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Warwick. His primary research interests are focused on the politics of secularism, non-religion and the role of religion in the public sphere. He is a co-author of The Politics of New Atheism (Routledge. 2018).
Atheism has related to politics in various ways. In the ancient world atheism was seen as a threat to a social order rooted in religion. In its contemporary form, atheists have formed campaigns to challenge religious power and privilege. Atheism has internal politics too, with power struggles and disputes around issues such as race and gender.
31. What Is the Historical Relationship Between Atheism and Racism? [+–] 121-124
Nathan G. Alexander
Independent Scholar
Nathan G. Alexander is a writer and historian from Canada. He is the author of Race in a Godless World: Atheism, Race, and Civilization, 1850-1914 (NYU Press/Manchester University Press, 2019).
This chapter examines whether secularization had an impact on the rise of racism since about 1500. It explores different approaches to this question and arguments from both sides. One can point, for example, to things like Christian anti-Semitism and justifications for slavery. But one can also point to the development of secular scientific racism which divided humanity into a hierarchy of distinct racial groups. The article concludes by suggesting that neither Christianity nor atheism are inherently racist or antiracist.
32. Does Atheism Promote Peace? [+–] 125-128
Stacey Gutkowski
King’s College London
Stacey Gutkowski is a Senior Lecturer in Conflict Studies and Co-Director of the Centre for the Study of Divided Societies, King’s College London. Her research interrogates the
various relationships between war, peace, religion and the secular. She is the author of two books, Religion, War and Israel’s Secular Millennials: Being Reasonable?(Manchester University Press, 2020) and Secular War: Myths of Religion, Politics and Violence (I.B. Tauris, 2013), as well as articles and book chapters on the relationships among politics, security, religion and secularism in Jordan, Israel/Palestine, Lebanon, Iraq, Egypt, Afghanistan, the United States, and the United Kingdom. She is co-editor of the book series Religion and Its Others: Studies in Religion, Nonreligion and Secularity (DeGruyter) and was co-director of the Nonreligion and Secularity Research Network (2008-20). Further information about her work can be found at www.staceygutkowski.com.
Since 9/11, academics have researched whether religions promote violence. They have found a mixed picture: sometimes yes but most often no. For comparison, they have examined ‘atheist’ regimes, like the USSR. We cannot come to any sound conclusions about a causal relationship between atheism and peace. But we can begin to ask other interesting questions about the relationship between peace, violence and atheism.
33. How Has Atheism Related to Communism? [+–] 129-132
Atko Remmel
University of Tartu
Atko Remmel is Senior Research Fellow in the University of Tartu and University of Tallinn, Estonia. He has published on antireligious policy and atheist propaganda in the Soviet Union, (non)religion and nationalism, secularization and religious change, and contemporary forms of (non)religion and spirituality. He has carried out fieldwork among nonreligious population in Estonia and on people’s relationship with nature.
This chapter addresses the different constellations between atheism and communism and the theoretical basis for antireligious attitude within Marxist thinking, focusing specifically on atheism in the Soviet Union, one of the best-known communist experiments.
34. Is Contemporary Atheism Leaning Politically to the Right or the Left? [+–] 133-136
Stuart McAnulla
University of Leeds
Stuart McAnulla is an Associate Professor in Politics at the University of Leeds. He has research interests in the politics of contemporary atheism, ideological change in British
politics and social/political science meta-theory. Books include: The Politics of New Atheism, 2019 (co-authored with Steven Kettell and Marcus Shulzke), Routledge, and British Politics: A Critical Introduction, Continuum.
Being an atheist does not necessarily mean that you will identify more with the political left than the right. However, atheism has often been considered to be a threat to the existing social order and thus associated more with left-wing worldviews. In recent times some of the most famous atheists have promoted views which dovetail with aspects of neoconservatism, yet many others tie atheism to wider struggles for equality. Indeed, in general, atheists tend to be more left-liberal in their political attitudes than those who are religiously affiliated.
35. Is It Possible for an Atheist to Become a President or a Prime Minister? [+–] 137-139
Stuart McAnulla
University of Leeds
Stuart McAnulla is an Associate Professor in Politics at the University of Leeds. He has research interests in the politics of contemporary atheism, ideological change in British
politics and social/political science meta-theory. Books include: The Politics of New Atheism, 2019 (co-authored with Steven Kettell and Marcus Shulzke), Routledge, and British Politics: A Critical Introduction, Continuum.
Even talented atheist political leaders need to think carefully about how they refer to God and religion in their campaigns. For example, presidential candidates in the United States are expected to have a religious affiliation, and polls suggest that many electors would not vote for an openly atheist candidate. However, the more secular political context in the United Kingdom means that it is very possible for an atheist to become the British prime minister. Indeed, within wider Europe there have been instances of atheists being elected as national leaders, and in Australia the atheist Julia Gillard became prime minister (2010-13).
36. Do Laws About Religion Take Atheism into Account? [+–] 140-143
Lori G. Beaman
University of Ottowa
View Website
Lori G. Beaman, Ph.D., F.R.S.C., is the Canada Research Chair in Religious Diversity and Social Change, Professor in the Department of Classics and Religious Studies at the University of Ottawa, and Director of the ‘Nonreligion in a Complex Future’ project (nonreligionproject.ca). She previously directed the ‘Religion and Diversity Project’ (religionanddiversity.ca). Her publications include The Transition of Religion to Culture in Law and Public Discourse (Routledge, 2020), Deep Equality in an Era of Religious Diversity (Oxford University Press, 2017, and ‘Living Well Together in a (non)Religious Future: Contributions from the Sociology of Religion,’ Sociology of Religion. Professor Beaman received the 2017 Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Impact Award in the Insight Category and holds an honorary doctorate from Uppsala University.
This chapter considers the intersection of atheism and law. Specifically, it examines legal protections for atheists (and other nonreligious people) through human rights guarantees of the freedom of and from religion. The chapter also explores the ways that religion is subtly privileged in, for example, courts mandating attendance at Alcoholics Anonymous (with its reference to a “higher power”) or the persistence of religious symbols in public institutions. Despite this, the chapter argues that the growth of the numbers of atheists and nonreligious people in recent years has the potential to shift legal frameworks dealing with religion.
37. Why Do Some Atheists Want to Convert Others? [+–] 144-147
Steven Kettell
University of Warwick
Steven Kettell is an Associate Professor in Politics and International Studies in the Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Warwick. His primary research interests are focused on the politics of secularism, non-religion and the role of religion in the public sphere. He is a co-author of The Politics of New Atheism (Routledge. 2018).
Not all atheists actively seek to change people’s minds about religion, but those that do tend to focus on three main reasons. First, atheists consider the claims made by religion to be wrong. Second, atheists often claim that religious beliefs produce negative consequences, such as promoting violence and discrimination. Third, atheists may seek to promote atheist ideas as a way of normalising non-religious views and gaining equal rights for atheists.
38. Is There Discrimination Against Atheists? [+–] 148-151
Ryan Cragun
University of Tampa
Ryan T. Cragun, Ryan T. Cragun is a professor of sociology at The University of Tampa. His research focuses on Mormonism and the nonreligious and has been published in various
scholarly journals. He is also the author of several books.
Prejudice is thinking differently about people with some characteristic, usually in a negative way. Discrimination is treating people differently on the basis of some characteristic they hold. There is robust research indicating that there is widespread prejudice against atheists in many countries, though not all countries. The extent to which that prejudice translates into discrimination varies, but there is compelling evidence that many atheists experience discrimination, though it varies in severity.
39. What Do Religious People Think of Atheists? [+–] 152-155
Petra Klug
Universität Bremen
Petra Klug obtained a Master’s degree in Sociology and Cultural Studies (Magister Artium), as well as a Master’s degree in the Study of Religion (Master of Arts), from University of Leipzig. She has received the doctorate scholarship of the German Research Foundation and was associated to the DFG-research group on Religious Non-Conformism. Klug has published a book on the German discourse on Islam, as well as several articles about religion, nonreligion, gender, and Human Rights. Currently she works as Research Associate at University of Bremen, Germany, Department for the Study of Religion and Religion Education completing her dissertation on the relationship between the Religious and the Secular in the United States.
The chapter describes typical stereotypes about atheists and explains the psychological mechanisms behind them.
40. Why Do Some Atheists Remain Members of Religious Groups? [+–] 156-159
Isabella Kasselstrand
University of Aberdeen
Isabella Kasselstrand is a Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Aberdeen. Using quantitative and mixed methods, her research examines secularization and nonreligion in northern Europe and the United States.
A common presumption is that atheists almost never belong to religious organizations. However, recent data (International Social Survey Program 2018) suggest that a significant portion of nonbelievers, across many countries, do in fact identify with a religious group. This chapter discusses reasons grounded in culture, history, politics, and family to explain why some atheists maintain a connection to organized religion.
41. How Are Atheists Organized? [+–] 160-162
Richard Cimino,Christopher Smith
Religion Watch
Richard Cimino is a visiting professor in sociology at the State University of New York at Old Westbury. He is also editor of Religion Watch, a monthly publication reporting on new research and trends in contemporary religion. He is the co-author (with Christopher Smith) of
Atheist Awakening: Secular Activism and Community in America.
Independent Scholar
Christopher Smith is an independent scholar, co-author of Atheist Awakening, and other articles on atheism.
In the past, secular humanists have formed church-like structures, with memberships and leaders resembling clergy. In other societies, atheists have organized debating and intellectual societies. Along with this continuing group formation, today we see significant online involvement among secularists.
42. Are Atheist Activists Mostly Men? [+–] 163-165
Richard Cimino,Christopher Smith
Religion Watch
Richard Cimino is a visiting professor in sociology at the State University of New York at Old Westbury. He is also editor of Religion Watch, a monthly publication reporting on new research and trends in contemporary religion. He is the co-author (with Christopher Smith) of
Atheist Awakening: Secular Activism and Community in America.
Independent Scholar
Christopher Smith is an independent scholar, co-author of Atheist Awakening, and other articles on atheism.
Men have played a disproportionate role in organized secularism. But this pattern is changing to a certain extent as women have become less religious, and as feminist activists have become more involved in atheist movements and groups.
43. Do Atheists and Feminists Support Each Other? [+–] 166-169
Tiina Mahlamäki
University of Turku
Tiina Mahlamäki is senior lecturer in the study of religion, University of Turku, Finland. She has published several articles about atheism and gender.
The article explores the relationship of selected main atheist thinkers (such as Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, Sam Harris, Ayaan Hirsi Ali) to women and feminism, but also introduces feminist atheism in everyday life and in atheist organisations. Some researchers suggest that all feminists should be atheists, and the values atheists appreciate (such as equality) suggest that atheists should support feminism – but the experiences of feminists within atheist circles indicate that they do not.
44. How Are Atheists Represented in the Media? [+–] 170-173
Teemu Taira
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.
It is a widely spread assumption, at least in Europe and North America, that the mainstream media is somewhat antireligious. This chapter argues against this view by suggesting that if media representations of atheism are taken into account, it is clear that the mainstream media, while offering space for debate on religion and atheism, is usually not on the side of outspoken atheists.
45. What Is the Historical Role of Atheism in Literature and the Arts? [+–] 174-177
James Bryant Reeves
Texas State University
James Bryant Reeves is an assistant professor of English at Texas State University, in San Marcos, TX. His research focuses on 18th -century British literature, secularization, and satire. His first book, Godless Fictions in the Eighteenth Century: A Literary History of Atheism, was published by Cambridge University Press.
This chapter examines literary and visual depictions of unbelief from the early modern period to the present. By highlighting diverse portrayals of atheistic worlds and characters, the chapter contends that attitudes toward unbelief are not merely shaped by logical arguments and rational debate but by the stories we tell ourselves about godlessness.
46. Is Atheism Visible in Popular Culture? [+–] 178-181
Teemu Taira
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.
It is safe to suggest that atheism has not been a particularly visible theme in Western popular culture. By examining films, television and popular music, this brief survey shows that atheism and atheists are not fully invisible in popular culture. Popular culture products addressing atheist identities proudly, rather than stereotypically in a negative manner, have become more common, but it is still easier to find examples of implicit atheistic themes, which primarily means criticism of religion.

Beliefs, Values and Practices

47. Are Children Born Atheist? 185-188
Andrew Ross Atkinson,Thomas Joseph Coleman III
University of Bialystok
Andrew Ross Atkinson did his Ph.D in Philosophy of Science at the University of Bristol. He is a Postdoctoral Researcher within the Society & Cognition Unit at the University of Bialystok, Poland, and Visiting Researcher at the University of Agder, Norway.
Independent Scholar
View Website
Thomas J. Coleman III is an independent scholar in the USA. He did his Ph.D in the Psychology of Religion at Coventry University in the United Kingdom.
48. Do Atheist Parents Have Atheist Children? [+–] 189-192
Christel Manning
Sacred Heart University, USA
Christel Manning, Professor of Religious Studies at Sacred Heart University, has spent more than a decade studying people who leave religion. Her book, Losing our Religion, was rated one of the top ten religion titles of 2015 and received the 2016 Distinguished Book Award from the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion. She has published numerous articles about the so-called “Nones” in both scholarly and popular journals and has lectured widely on the topic. Manning’s current research, supported by a grant from the John Templeton Foundation, examines how non-religious individuals find meaning as they approach the end of life.
Discusses intergenerational transmission of atheism and the various factors that influence the process of developing a non-religious worldview.
49. How Does One Become an Atheist? [+–] 193-196
Julia Martínez-Ariño
University of Groningen
Julia Martínez-Ariño is an Assistant Professor of Sociology of Religion at the University of Groningen, Netherlands. Her current research is on apostasy in Spain and Argentina.
This chapter addresses this question by focusing on two main aspects. First, it explores the phases a person may go through to become an atheist. Second, it examines the triggers or motivations that initiate or lead to such a process. Drawing on sociological and psychological literature, the chapter offers a nuanced account of a rather complex process, highlighting the multiplicity of possible paths and factors involved.
50. How Do Atheists Reason That God Does Not Exist? [+–] 197-200
Aku Visala
University of Helsinki
Aku Visala (PhD, Philosophy of Religion) is a Research Fellow of the Finnish Academy at the University of Helsinki, Finland. He has held postdoctoral positions at the universities of Oxford (UK), Princeton (USA), and Notre Dame (USA). His work is located at the crossroads of analytic philosophy, theology, and the cognitive sciences.
One argumentative strategy is to insist that atheism is the default assumption and needs no positive evidence for its support. Another strategy invokes the success of science as an epistemic guideline to our metaphysical views: since the sciences do not need God as an explanatory factor, we can safely disregard God from our metaphysics. Finally, atheists have developed powerful arguments against the existence of God, like the argument from evil and the argument from the hiddenness of God.
51. How Do Atheists Deal with the Problem of Evil? [+–] 201-204
Sami Pihlström
University of Helsinki
Sami Pihlström is Professor of Philosophy of Religion at the University of Helsinki, Finland. He has published widely on pragmatism, realism, ethics, metaphysics, transcendental philosophy, and philosophy of religion. His recent books include Kantian
Antitheodicy
(with Sari Kivistö, Palgrave Macmillan, 2016), Death and Finitude (Lexington, 2016), Pragmatic Realism, Religious Truth, and Antitheodicy (Helsinki University Press, 2020), and Why Solipsism Matters (Bloomsbury, 2020).
The reality of evil is, according to many atheists, one of the strongest reasons for rejecting any theistic belief in an omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent God. The chapter discusses the argument from evil in its atheistic employment, while also drawing attention to the opposition between theodicism and antitheodicism, which can be argued to cut across the one between theism and atheism.
52. How Do Atheists Cope with Mortality? [+–] 205-207
Jacob Sawyer
Pennsylvania State University
Jacob S. Sawyer is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Pennsylvania State University, Mont Alto. His research interests include experiences of nonreligious and atheist individuals; psychological factors related to death, dying and bereavement; and college student mental health.
People often assume that atheists are unable to cope with their own mortality without a belief in God or gods, though recent research findings suggest otherwise. This chapter examines some of these findings in greater detail by highlighting recent studies and personal narratives related to coping with mortality as an atheist.
53. Where Do Atheists Get Their Values? [+–] 208-211
Kyle Thompson
Harvey Mudd College and MiraCosta College
Kyle Thompson, PhD, is a philosopher whose research interests center on the intersection between philosophy and the social sciences. He teaches philosophy, religion, and writing as an adjunct instructor at various institutions, including Harvey Mudd College and MiraCosta College.
Atheists source their values from the same wellsprings that all humans do: biology, culture, and reason. Evolution equips newborns with the raw materials of morality. Culture and socialization shape and constrain the developing person’s moral sentiments. Reason can refine those values. Of course, a complex dance takes place between these broad sources—evolution, culture, reason—and there is no simple way to spell out how they bestow any human with values. The dance includes friendships, real-life mentors, fictional heroes, value-laden myths, sorrow, hugs, organized sports, late night reflection when sleep won’t arrive, DNA, the sting of unfairness when someone cuts in line, and much more. Perhaps the only place where atheists don’t get their values is belief in God, which they lack. While the theist appears to have a simple answer to the origin of their values—e.g., “God” or “religion”—such responses cloak an equally complex dance of ideas and events and evolutionary heritage. In total, the question of where atheists get their values is really a question of where humans get their values.
54. Do Atheists Have Beliefs in Supernatural Phenomena? [+–] 212-215
Jonathan Andrew Lanman
Queen’s University Belfast
View Website
Jonathan Lanman is Acting Director of the Institute of Cognition & Culture, and Senior Lecturer in Anthropology at Queen’s University Belfast. His research aims to utilize the tools of both cognitive and social anthropology to examine religion, atheism, morality, and intergroup relations.
While we can examine survey and interview data to discern whether or not atheists have beliefs in other supernatural phenomena, we should also be aware of how some interested parties frame the answers to suit their own interests. As part of the Understanding Unbelief programme, we found that most (though not all) atheists and agnostics had beliefs in some mix of supernatural phenomena. Our findings problematize common explanations by religious individuals that atheists reject belief in God because of a desire to engage in immorality and by atheists that their atheism is solely a result of rational thinking.
55. Do Atheists Have Religious Experiences? [+–] 216-219
Abby Day
Goldsmiths, University of London
Abby Day is Professor in Race, Faith and Culture in the Department of Sociology, Goldsmiths, University of London, where her teaching, research, writing and supervisions cover sociology of religion, media and religion, and critical criminology. Past Chair of the Sociology of Religion Study group in the British Sociological Association, her work focuses on improving the academic and public understanding of complex religious and non-religious identities.
If religion is defined as an institution that is organised around transcendent, other-worldly beliefs and phenomena, and a religious experience is a moment when such numinous, other-worldly beings or feelings are sensed then, yes, research clearly shows that atheists have such experiences. The term ‘atheist’ merely signals a disbelief in god, not a disbelief in ghosts or granny’s enduring spirit.
56. Do Atheists Have Sacred Scripture? [+–] 220-223
Ethan Quillen
Independent Scholar
Ethan G. Quillen holds a PhD in religious studies from the University of Edinburgh. He writes about how Atheists have “lived” their Atheisms, from judicial battles and fictional representations, to the construction of “churches” through parody.
This discussion will address this question in a unique way, using as an example a United States Supreme Court decision defending the religious right of an Atheist to use “profane” texts in the same way a Christian might use the Bible to justify his conscientious objection to fighting in the Vietnam War on religious grounds.
57. Do Atheists Have Rituals? [+–] 224-226
Richard Cimino,Christopher Smith
Religion Watch
Richard Cimino is a visiting professor in sociology at the State University of New York at Old Westbury. He is also editor of Religion Watch, a monthly publication reporting on new research and trends in contemporary religion. He is the co-author (with Christopher Smith) of
Atheist Awakening: Secular Activism and Community in America.
Independent Scholar
Christopher Smith is an independent scholar, co-author of Atheist Awakening, and other articles on atheism.
Historically tied to religion, rituals have been a contentious topic in the atheist movement. This contribution briefly explores this both internally within the movement itself as well as more generally. We find a new interest in rituals among atheists and secular humanists.
58. Can an Atheist Be Spiritual? [+–] 227-230
Atko Remmel
University of Tartu
Atko Remmel is Senior Research Fellow in the University of Tartu and University of Tallinn, Estonia. He has published on antireligious policy and atheist propaganda in the Soviet Union, (non)religion and nationalism, secularization and religious change, and contemporary forms of (non)religion and spirituality. He has carried out fieldwork among nonreligious population in Estonia and on people’s relationship with nature.
This chapter deals with the emergence of the concept “atheist spirituality” and proposes that it could be understood as a notion of meaning-making within an atheist worldview, or as a bridge-building strategy between religious and non-religious communities.
59. Are Atheists Immoral? [+–] 231-234
Kyle Thompson
Harvey Mudd College and MiraCosta College
Kyle Thompson, PhD, is a philosopher whose research interests center on the intersection between philosophy and the social sciences. He teaches philosophy, religion, and writing as an adjunct instructor at various institutions, including Harvey Mudd College and MiraCosta College.
Atheists are just as moral as religious people, and in some respects more moral. Like everyone else, atheists value community, compassion, charity, and peace over their opposites. However, since much of the world associates goodness with God or religion, atheist morality is viewed with suspicion. If atheists believe God isn’t watching over their actions, then what’s stopping them from stealing, lying, and cheating with abandon? It turns out that what stops atheists is probably what is stopping religious folks too: natural and social forces. This helps explain why some of the most morally prosperous countries are high in atheism—it also explains why full-fledged believers sometimes commit the worst sins. When people organically and gradually shed their religious and theistic views, it often coincides with societal health. Ultimately, learning your neighbor sleeps in on Sundays should give you no pause.
60. Are Atheists Intolerant? [+–] 235-238
Filip Užarević
Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar, Zagreb, Croatia
Filip Užarević is a postdoctoral researcher at the Institute of Social Sciences Ivo Pilar. He completed his MA studies at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Zagreb, and obtained his PhD at Université catholique de Louvain (Belgium). His primary research interests relate to psychology of religion.
Being non-religious seems to coincide with liberal tendencies and importance of rationality, as well as relatively high tolerance of various minority groups (e.g. sexual or racial/ethnic minorities). Does this mean that nonbelievers are equally tolerant of all groups, or do they have group biases of their own? This chapter reviews some of the recent research demonstrating that, while nonbelievers do show a degree of intolerance toward their ideological opposition (e.g., religious and illiberal people), this intolerance seems to be limited and context-dependent.
61. Do Atheists Value Some Religions More Than Other Religions? [+–] 239-243
Joel Thiessen,Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme
Ambrose University
Joel Thiessen is Professor of Sociology and Director of the Flourishing Congregations Institute at Ambrose University in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. His research interests include religious nones, congregations, millennials, and religion in Canada. Along with nearly a
dozen peer-reviewed articles, he has published four books, including None of the Above:
Nonreligious Identity in the US and Canada (with Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme) and Millennial
Mosaic: How Pluralism and Choice are Shaping Canadian Youth and the Future of Canada (with Reginald Bibby and Monetta Bailey). For more information, see www.joelthiessen.ca.
University of Waterloo
Sarah Wilkins-Laflamme is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and Legal Studies at the University of Waterloo (Canada). She completed her DPhil (PhD equivalent) in sociology at the University of Oxford in 2015. Her research interests include
quantitative methods, sociology of religion, immigration and ethnicity and political sociology. Dr. Wilkins-Laflamme currently has 16 articles published in top Canadian and international peer-reviewed journals in the fields of sociology of religion, religious studies and political science, including the Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, Canadian Review of Political Science, Sociology of Religion, Canadian Review of Sociology, Studies in Religion, and the British Journal of Sociology. She is co-author of the 2020 book None of the Above: Nonreligious Identity in the U.S. and Canada, with New York University Press.
Atheists hold varying attitudes toward religion because of different exposures to and experiences with a variety of religions around the world. In Canada and the United States, atheists are inclined to value religions that they perceive as more “inclusive” and tolerant – most notably, Buddhism – while reserving their disapproval for religions believed to be “exclusive” and intolerant, including notably Evangelical Christians, Muslims, Catholics, Mormons, and Jehovah’s Witnesses.
62. What Do Atheists Value in Religion, If Anything? [+–] 244-247
Teemu Taira
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.
This chapter shows that some atheists see the relevance in meditation practices and community building. Others value the ability of religious institutions to offer support for life passages, provide services that other societal institutions do not offer, and participate in public discussions about the common good. Yet others appreciate the historical contribution religious traditions may have made to present-day societies. Critics maintain that all the benefits are attainable without religious traditions and institutions.
63. Is Atheism Good for Your Health? [+–] 248-251
Kevin McCaffree,Anondah Saide
University of North Texas
Kevin McCaffree is an assistant professor of sociology at the University of North Texas. He has written books, peer-reviewed articles and handbook chapters on religion and non- religion.
University of North Texas
Anondah Saide is a visiting assistant professor educational psychology at the University of North Texas. She is trained as a developmental psychologist, and has studied how children form religious as compared to scientific concepts. She has published articles on children’s
concepts of god and the relationship between non-religion and adolescent health.
In the chapter, we will talk about how to re-conceptualize the question: is atheism ever directly related to health? Or is it that atheism can be a proxy for deviance or other-ness in religious environments and that the resultant social isolation and stigma cause poor health outcomes? We suggest the latter is more correct, and that as societies secularize, we can expect stigma and social isolation of atheists to decline.

Future

64. What is the Future of Atheism? [+–] 255-258
Teemu Taira
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.
This chapter examines the future of atheism by paying attention to demographic projections and the “demographic disadvantage” of atheists (i.e., lower fertility rates). It also asks whether we can rely on the predictive models concerning the future of atheism and recommends paying attention to the policy functions such models may have.

End Matter

Index 259-266
Teemu Taira
University of Helsinki
View Website
Teemu Taira is Senior Lecturer in the Study of Religion, University of Helsinki. His publications include Media Portrayals of Religion and the Secular Sacred (Ashgate 2013, co-authored with Kim Knott & Elizabeth Poole), Taking ‘Religion’ Seriously: Essays on the Discursive Study of Religion (Brill 2022) and more than 70 articles in journals and edited volumes.

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