Mounting evidence supports long-standing claims that religions can extend cooperative networks. However, religious prosociality may have a strongly parochial component. Moreover, aspects of religion may promote or exacerbate conflict with those outside a given religious group, promoting regional violence, intergroup conflict and tacit prejudice against non-believers. Anti-atheist prejudice—a growing concern in increasingly secular societies—affects employment, elections, family life and broader social inclusion. Preliminary work in the United States suggests that anti-atheist prejudice stems, in part, from deeply rooted intuitions about religion’s putatively necessary role in morality. However, the cross-cultural prevalence and magnitude—as...
<div><p>Scientific research yields inconsistent and contradictory evidence relating religion to mora...
Debates about the causal relationship between religion and morality continue to be inconclusive, des...
Anti-atheist prejudice in the U.S. is socially accepted and rife—and not just because most Americans...
Mounting evidence supports long-standing claims that religions can extend cooperative networks. Howe...
Recent polls indicate that atheists are among the least liked people in areas with religious majorit...
ii Recent polls (e.g., Edgell, Gerteis & Hartmann, 2006) have consistently found that atheists a...
Recent polls (e.g., Edgell, Gerteis & Hartmann, 2006) have consistently found that atheists are the ...
Recent polls (e.g., Edgell, Gerteis & Hartmann, 2006) have consistently found that atheists are the ...
International audienceAbstract Why do moral religions exist? An influential psychological explanatio...
Why do moral religions exist? An influential psychological explanation is that religious beliefs in ...
Although prejudice is typically positively related to relative outgroup size, four studies found con...
We propose that religion impacts trust and trustworthiness in ways that depend on how individuals ar...
AbstractWe propose that religion impacts trust and trustworthiness in ways that depend on how indivi...
Religious people tend to believe atheists are immoral. Although some work suggests that atheists the...
Scientific research yields inconsistent and contradictory evidence relating religion to moral judgme...
<div><p>Scientific research yields inconsistent and contradictory evidence relating religion to mora...
Debates about the causal relationship between religion and morality continue to be inconclusive, des...
Anti-atheist prejudice in the U.S. is socially accepted and rife—and not just because most Americans...
Mounting evidence supports long-standing claims that religions can extend cooperative networks. Howe...
Recent polls indicate that atheists are among the least liked people in areas with religious majorit...
ii Recent polls (e.g., Edgell, Gerteis & Hartmann, 2006) have consistently found that atheists a...
Recent polls (e.g., Edgell, Gerteis & Hartmann, 2006) have consistently found that atheists are the ...
Recent polls (e.g., Edgell, Gerteis & Hartmann, 2006) have consistently found that atheists are the ...
International audienceAbstract Why do moral religions exist? An influential psychological explanatio...
Why do moral religions exist? An influential psychological explanation is that religious beliefs in ...
Although prejudice is typically positively related to relative outgroup size, four studies found con...
We propose that religion impacts trust and trustworthiness in ways that depend on how individuals ar...
AbstractWe propose that religion impacts trust and trustworthiness in ways that depend on how indivi...
Religious people tend to believe atheists are immoral. Although some work suggests that atheists the...
Scientific research yields inconsistent and contradictory evidence relating religion to moral judgme...
<div><p>Scientific research yields inconsistent and contradictory evidence relating religion to mora...
Debates about the causal relationship between religion and morality continue to be inconclusive, des...
Anti-atheist prejudice in the U.S. is socially accepted and rife—and not just because most Americans...