By Graeme Paton
People with higher IQs are less likely to believe in God, according to a new study.
Professor Richard Lynn, emeritus professor of psychology at Ulster University, said many more members of the "intellectual elite" considered themselves atheists than the national average.
A decline in religious observance over the last century was directly linked to a rise in average intelligence, he claimed.
Professor Lynn, who has provoked controversy in the past with research linking intelligence to race and sex, said university academics were less likely to believe in God than almost anyone else.
A survey of Royal Society fellows found that only 3.3 per cent believed in God - at a time when 68.5 per cent of the general UK population described themselves as believers.
A separate poll in the 90s found only seven per cent of members of the American National Academy of Sciences believed in God.
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1 comment:
While it is rational to consider that the material world may be only a limited aspect of reality, and thus be open to the possibility that there maybe other influences on reality (not supernatural, but just nature not easily observed), the belief in a particular religious mythology or dogma is not tenable given modern science and philosophy. If you consider Europe from 1700 to the present, you see a steady de-Christianization of the continent as western culture develops. Religion is going the way of idol worship and sacrificing virgins to appease the Gods. It'll probably take a while, and a lot of damage will be done as the true believers won't give up without a fight.
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