Research on the topics of atheism, agnosticism, and irreligion has been limited during much of the last century. We explain the reasons for a lack of research in this field and discuss the recent interest in this topic. The most recent wave of research has been concentrated during the past decade and tends to look at the dual issues of who composes the religiously unaffiliated and why they choose this self-identification. Recent research has begun to take a much wider and deeper view on the subject. This includes research on particular segments of the population such as atheists, as well as understanding how the religiously unaffiliated are viewed by the broader culture. We conclude by describing important directions for future research. In...
The present collection brings together a set of essays which shed light on recent research into non-...
The present study investigated which stereotypes agnostics share with atheists, and which stereotype...
The term ‘new atheism’ was first used in 2006 by Gary Wolf, who was describing the wave of irreligio...
Extensive research has been conducted in exploration of the American religious landscape, however ...
The author presents an analysis of an empirical research concerning religion in the worldview of ath...
This paper is specifically in response to those people who believe in God but do not believe in reli...
With the tremendous rise in the prevalence of atheism and agnosticism in the U.S. in the past severa...
This study is a multi-year ethnographic investigation of self-identified atheists in America. The fo...
While the character and philosophies upheld by today’s atheists have been well documented in the pas...
Why do several nonreligious people self-identify as agnostic and not as atheist? Beside epistemologi...
Streib H, Klein C. Atheists, Agnostics, and Apostates. In: Kenneth I. P, Julie J. E, James W. J, eds...
This paper introduces the general methodological problems facing researchers who wish to account for...
Within the last 20 years sociological research on science and religion has provided new insights tha...
In the introduction to this special issue, we set the agenda for researching the aspirations and pra...
The emergence of a science of religion and religions in which the sacred became a topic of disintere...
The present collection brings together a set of essays which shed light on recent research into non-...
The present study investigated which stereotypes agnostics share with atheists, and which stereotype...
The term ‘new atheism’ was first used in 2006 by Gary Wolf, who was describing the wave of irreligio...
Extensive research has been conducted in exploration of the American religious landscape, however ...
The author presents an analysis of an empirical research concerning religion in the worldview of ath...
This paper is specifically in response to those people who believe in God but do not believe in reli...
With the tremendous rise in the prevalence of atheism and agnosticism in the U.S. in the past severa...
This study is a multi-year ethnographic investigation of self-identified atheists in America. The fo...
While the character and philosophies upheld by today’s atheists have been well documented in the pas...
Why do several nonreligious people self-identify as agnostic and not as atheist? Beside epistemologi...
Streib H, Klein C. Atheists, Agnostics, and Apostates. In: Kenneth I. P, Julie J. E, James W. J, eds...
This paper introduces the general methodological problems facing researchers who wish to account for...
Within the last 20 years sociological research on science and religion has provided new insights tha...
In the introduction to this special issue, we set the agenda for researching the aspirations and pra...
The emergence of a science of religion and religions in which the sacred became a topic of disintere...
The present collection brings together a set of essays which shed light on recent research into non-...
The present study investigated which stereotypes agnostics share with atheists, and which stereotype...
The term ‘new atheism’ was first used in 2006 by Gary Wolf, who was describing the wave of irreligio...