Word for not believing in god

The English word for a person who does not believe in any god or gods is atheist.

Related words
Nonbeliever, unbeliever, infidel, pagan, and heathen are all words that are often used as synonyms for the word atheist. However, when used by a member of a particular religion (e.g. Christianity, Islam, or Judaism), these terms are usually meant to include not only atheists, but anyone who is not a member of that religion. Historically, the words pagan and heathen were commonly used (along with barbarbian) in Western cultures to refer to people living in primitive, tribal cultures, such as American Indians, aboriginal Australians, and native Africans.

The word agnostic refers to a person who denies that the existence of a god can be known; they do not necessarily deny that a god does exist, but they assert that it is not possible to know that he exists. However, no true agnostic can be categorized as a believer, by anyone’s standards.

Skeptic is a generic word that is often used to refer to an agnostic or any person who is critical of or does not believe in a particular religion or religion in general.

Your definition of agnostic is incomplete:

[Merriam-Webster]

1 : a person who holds the view that any ultimate reality (such as God) is unknown and probably unknowable
broadly : one who is not committed to believing in either the existence or the nonexistence of God or a god
2 : a person who is unwilling to commit to an opinion about something
// political agnostics

In all but the strict first sense, an agnostic is simply someone who doesn’t believe one way or the other. They think it might be true—or it might not. In other words, they’re not committed to any particular viewpoint.

Unless going by that strict first sense of the word, that doesn’t mean that they believe something is actually unknowable. In the second sense of the word, and the casual first sense, an agnostic may also have simply not looked into it much or not really care.

Based on that, you have people who are theists, who believe in the existence of something, people who are atheists, who believe in its nonexistence, and people who are agnostics, who don’t (or won’t) say one way or the other—for whatever reason.

While there’s nothing wrong with apatheism in the other answer, people who are agnostics can also be apatheists. And people who are apatheists may well have looked into it carefully and come to a reasoned conclusion (formed an opinion) that the answer doesn’t matter. In fact, I’d say that somebody who claims to be an apatheist must already be aware of what that word means, and so would have formed an opinion about God: that it doesn’t matter.

In general, somebody who has not formed an opinion at all is simply undecided. And somebody who has never considered something at all is either wilfully or unintentionally ignorant about that thing.

Most Relevant Verses


Matthew 17:17

And Jesus answered and said, “You unbelieving and perverted generation, how long shall I be with you? How long shall I put up with you? Bring him here to Me.”


Mark 9:19

And He *answered them and *said, “O unbelieving generation, how long shall I be with you? How long shall I put up with you? Bring him to Me!”


Luke 9:41

And Jesus answered and said, “You unbelieving and perverted generation, how long shall I be with you and put up with you? Bring your son here.”


Matthew 6:30

But if God so clothes the grass of the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the furnace, will He not much more clothe you? You of little faith!


Matthew 8:26

He *said to them, “Why are you afraid, you men of little faith?” Then He got up and rebuked the winds and the sea, and it became perfectly calm.


Matthew 14:31

Immediately Jesus stretched out His hand and took hold of him, and *said to him, “You of little faith, why did you doubt?”


Matthew 16:8

But Jesus, aware of this, said, “You men of little faith, why do you discuss among yourselves that you have no bread?


Luke 12:28

But if God so clothes the grass in the field, which is alive today and tomorrow is thrown into the furnace, how much more will He clothe you? You men of little faith!


Matthew 17:20

And He *said to them, “Because of the littleness of your faith; for truly I say to you, if you have faith the size of a mustard seed, you will say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there,’ and it will move; and nothing will be impossible to you.


Mark 4:40

And He said to them, “Why are you afraid? Do you still have no faith?”


Luke 8:25

And He said to them, “Where is your faith?” They were fearful and amazed, saying to one another, “Who then is this, that He commands even the winds and the water, and they obey Him?”


Matthew 13:58

And He did not do many miracles there because of their unbelief.


Mark 6:6

And He wondered at their unbelief.And He was going around the villages teaching.


John 12:37

But though He had performed so many signs before them, yet they were not believing in Him.


John 7:5

For not even His brothers were believing in Him.


John 7:48

No one of the rulers or Pharisees has believed in Him, has he?


John 6:64

But there are some of you who do not believe.” For Jesus knew from the beginning who they were who did not believe, and who it was that would betray Him.


John 16:9

concerning sin, because they do not believe in Me;


Mark 9:24

Immediately the boy’s father cried out and said, “I do believe; help my unbelief.”


John 3:18

He who believes in Him is not judged; he who does not believe has been judged already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.


John 3:32

What He has seen and heard, of that He testifies; and no one receives His testimony.


John 8:46

Which one of you convicts Me of sin? If I speak truth, why do you not believe Me?


Luke 22:67

“If You are the Christ, tell us.” But He said to them, “If I tell you, you will not believe;


John 10:37

If I do not do the works of My Father, do not believe Me;


John 10:38

but if I do them, though you do not believe Me, believe the works, so that you may know and understand that the Father is in Me, and I in the Father.”


John 12:39

For this reason they could not believe, for Isaiah said again,


John 14:10

Do you not believe that I am in the Father, and the Father is in Me? The words that I say to you I do not speak on My own initiative, but the Father abiding in Me does His works.


John 16:31

Jesus answered them, “Do you now believe?


1 Peter 2:7

This precious value, then, is for you who believe; but for those who disbelieve,
The stone which the builders rejected,
This became the very corner stone,”


John 4:48

So Jesus said to him, “Unless you people see signs and wonders, you simply will not believe.”


John 6:36

But I said to you that you have seen Me, and yet do not believe.


John 5:38

You do not have His word abiding in you, for you do not believe Him whom He sent.


John 8:45

But because I speak the truth, you do not believe Me.


Luke 18:8

I tell you that He will bring about justice for them quickly. However, when the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on the earth?”


John 3:12

If I told you earthly things and you do not believe, how will you believe if I tell you heavenly things?


John 5:47

But if you do not believe his writings, how will you believe My words?”


John 5:44

How can you believe, when you receive glory from one another and you do not seek the glory that is from the one and only God?

  • Believing In Yourself
  • Doubt Rebuked
  • Faith, Growth In
  • Lack Of Faith
  • Skepticism
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  • Unbelief, And Life Of Faith
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Our belief is not a belief. Our principles are not a faith. We do not rely solely upon science and reason, because these are necessary rather than sufficient factors, but we distrust anything that contradicts science or outrages reason. We may differ on many things, but what we respect is free inquiry, openmindedness, and the pursuit of ideas for their own sake.

—Christopher Hitchens, God is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything

Atheism is a non-prophet organization.

—Anonymous

Atheism (from the Greek a-, meaning «without», and theos, meaning «God») is the absence of belief in the existence of Gods.[1]
Theos includes the Abrahamic YHWH(s), Zeus, the Flying Spaghetti Monster, and every other deity from A to Z[2] (and 0-9, !, «, #, $ or any other character, obviously). For the definition of atheism, the terms «God» and «a god» are used interchangeably, as there is no difference between a monotheistic deity and a polytheistic pantheon of deities when it comes to complete disbelief in them.[1] This also intends to ignore the privileged position Yahweh has held in English grammar. Most atheists also do not believe in anything supernatural or paranormal (someone like this would be considered a naturalist or materialist).[1]

Atheism[edit]

We are all atheists about most of the gods that humanity has ever believed in. Some of us just go one god further.

—Richard Dawkins[3]

Tied up with some of the more awkward aspects of defining the term «atheist» is the question of what god, or type of god, is being denied.[1] This is particularly important for those who claim that atheism is supported by evidence (more specifically, the lack of evidence for a theistic case).[1]

If the god being denied is the interventionist God, whom most theists hold to exist, then the argument against the existence of this being is easy; the lack of any demonstrable interventions demonstrates the god’s lack of existence. In this case, absence of evidence is evidence of absence. However, if the god being denied is of a less interventionist, or deist, type god, the above argument regarding evidence doesn’t work. Indeed, the only possible «evidence» for a deist god is the universe’s very existence, and most sane people don’t tend to deny the universe exists. On the other hand, as said «evidence» is simply asserted and isn’t testable in any way, it is a lot less than wholly convincing, and we return to «What can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence.»

Whether atheism also requires a person to disbelieve in all other forms of magic, ghosts, or psychic powers is a question. These are not «gods» in the conventional sense, but still supernatural entities or powers. More «hardline» atheists would insist that disbelief in all things supernatural is mandatory for the label of «atheist». They would argue that this follows from the fact that atheism is a rational position and that atheists should take rational positions on other matters. In the case of atheism, what does and does not constitute a «god» can often be very subjective; the definition could be restricted to monotheistic «creator» gods, expanded to include all supernatural entities, or used to describe only things that are worshipped or idolized. The variables that arise when trying to perfectly codify «atheism» are numerous, which fits with its position as a lack of belief.

However, atheism only makes sense in the context of the ubiquity of religion and theistic belief worldwide. If religions didn’t exist, atheism wouldn’t exist, and any discussion of the subject would be inherently meaningless — the world doesn’t feature books, internet debates, and billboard campaigns saying that it’s fine to disbelieve in Bertrand Russell’s celestial teapot precisely because few, if any, people believe in the teapot. Therefore a working, albeit still slightly subjective, definition of what constitutes a «god» can be developed based on the beliefs of self-declared religions of the world. As a thought experiment, we can conceive of a religion that achieves literal overnight success by promoting some god, Athkel,[note 1] who will become a worldwide phenomenon tomorrow. An atheist would simply not believe in Athkel tomorrow, despite the fact that they had no belief in them yesterday, because it is a self-defined religious deity.

Types of atheism[edit]

Only a little more complicated than «don’t believe in God.»

There are many ways to describe different types of atheism, some of which are explained below. These shouldn’t be read as factions or sects within atheism in the same way as denominations and sects within religion (Protestant/Catholicism in Christianity, Sunni/Shia in Islam, and their multiple sub-groups, for example). One does not «join» a group of implicit atheists. Instead of sects that dictate people’s beliefs, these should be taken as models to roughly describe people’s beliefs and attitudes towards belief. There are many similarities, all of which are included in the blanket term «atheist.» However — as is typical in atheist thought — not all atheists consider these divisions particularly relevant, worthwhile, or meaningful.

The commonality among these various modes of atheism is the statement that no god or gods created natural phenomena such as the existence of life or the universe. Instead, these are usually explained through science, (usually) without resorting to supernatural explanations. Morality in atheism is also not based on religious precepts such as divine commandments or revelation through a holy text — many alternative philosophies exist to derive or explain morality, such as humanism.

Implicit vs. explicit atheism[edit]

Implicit atheism[edit]

Implicit atheism is simply the state of not holding a belief in any gods. Babies would be implicit atheists, since children don’t develop religious beliefs until they are taught them (or arrive at them independently as they mature).

Explicit atheism[edit]

Explicit atheism is a conscious rejection of the belief in gods or their existence. Explicit atheists can be weak or strong, but all strong atheists are explicit atheists.

Weak vs. strong atheism[edit]

Weak atheism[edit]

I only believe 12.5% of the Bible. I am an eighth-theist.[note 2]

—Anonymous (and probably better that way)[note 3]

Weak atheism (sometimes equated with «pragmatic atheism» or «negative atheism») describes the state of living as if no gods exist. It does not require an absolute statement of God’s non-existence. The argument is based on the fact that there is no solid evidence that gods, spatial teapots, or fairies exist, so we have no reason to believe in them. This argument could also be classified as extreme agnosticism or «agnostic atheism» — as it acknowledges the lack of evidence, but acts as if there were no gods.

Pragmatic atheists, however, are frequently reluctant to make outright statements like «Gods (or fairies) do not exist» because of the great difficulties involved in proving the absolute non-existence of anything — the idea that nothing can be proved is held in the philosophy of Pyrrhonism. Consequently, many pragmatic atheists would argue that the burden of proof does not lie with them to provide evidence against the extraordinary concept that gods exist. They would argue that it is up to the supporters of various religions to provide evidence for the existence of their own deities and that no argument is necessary on the atheist’s part (see null hypothesis, which is precisely what atheism is with respect to religion).

Strong atheism[edit]

Strong atheism (sometimes equated with «theoretical atheism«) makes an explicit statement against the existence of gods. Strong atheists would disagree with weak atheists about the inability to disprove the existence of gods. Strong atheism specifically combats religious beliefs and other arguments for belief in some god (or gods), such as Pascal’s Wager and argument from design. These arguments tend to demonstrate that the concept of god is logically inconsistent or incoherent to actively disprove the existence of a god.[6] Theological noncognitivism, which asserts the meaninglessness of religious language, is an argument commonly invoked by strong atheists.[note 4] In contrast, weak atheist arguments tend to concentrate on the evidence (or lack thereof) for god, while strong atheist arguments tend to concentrate on making a positive case for the non-existence of god.

Apatheism[edit]

See the main article on this topic: Apatheism

An apatheist has no interest in accepting or denying claims that a god or gods exist or do not exist. An apatheist considers the very question of the existence or non-existence of gods or other supernatural beings to be irrelevant and not worth consideration under any circumstances.

In short: they simply don’t care. (Well, okay, they care enough to give themselves a name — so that people explicitly know what it is they don’t care anything about. But that’s about it.)

Antitheism[edit]

See the main article on this topic: Antitheism

Antitheism is, perhaps surprisingly, technically separate from any and all positions on the existence or non-existence of any given deity. Antitheism simply argues that a given (or all possible) human implementation of religious beliefs, metaphysically «true» or not, leads to harmful and undesirable results, either to the adherent, society, or both. As justification, the antitheists often point to the incompatibility of religion-based morality with modern humanistic values or the atrocities and bloodshed wrought by religion and religious wars. Religious moderation, compared to religious extremism, is an example of theistic anti-theism, also known as dystheism. Dystheism also encompasses questioning the morals even of a deity you believe in, e.g., choosing to obey commandments on nonviolence over calls to violence from God, despite them both being clearly put forward by this alleged giver of all morals.

Post-theism[edit]

Post-theism is a form of atheism that doesn’t so much reject theism outright as believe it to be obsolete, that belief in God belongs to a stage of human development now past. The word stems from the Latin post «behind, after, afterward» + Greek theos «god» + -ist.

Though the belief system is independent of organized religions, some post-theists posit a specific religion as formerly useful. A notable example is Frank Hugh Foster, who, in a 1918 lecture, announced that modern culture had arrived at a «post-theistic stage» in which humanity has taken possession of the powers of agency and creativity that had formerly been projected upon God. Another instance is Friedrich Nietzsche’s declaration that «God is dead.»

Why are people atheists?[edit]

We must question the story logic of having an all-knowing all-powerful God, who creates faulty humans, and then blames them for His own mistakes.

—Eugene Wesley Roddenberry

It is obvious that not all atheists are «disaffected with religion» – many were just never raised with or indoctrinated with religious beliefs in the first place. Hence, a substantial number have nothing to become disaffected with. However, in those areas where religious belief is essentially taken as normal, there is a high chance that a person would have been religious before «coming out» as an atheist. As the term «atheist» only really means something in the context of universal religious belief, being disaffected or unconvinced by religion could certainly be one factor for many people who declare themselves atheists. Nevertheless, as has been said previously, there is debate in the atheist community, and not all atheists would agree with all of these reasons or even consider them relevant to atheism.

One of the major intellectual issues regarding disenchantment with religion is that most world religions insist that all other faiths are wrong. While some moderate believers may like to take a stance that «all religions are right, they’re just different interpretations», it’s undeniable that heresy and apostasy are looked down upon very harshly in many faiths. This suggests the possibility that no religion is right and further suggests that, because the vast majority of believers in any faith are born into it, being a member of the «correct» group or «the elect» is merely an accident of birth in most cases. There is also historical evidence that organized religion, while professing a peaceful moral code, is often the basis for exclusion and war and a method to motivate people in political conflicts. The enmity among different religions and even among sects within the same religion adds credibility to this idea.[note 5]

Other reasons may be more directly to do with a religion or its specifics — namely (1) the evils that the concept of religion has produced over the ages, (2) the hypocrisy of professed believers and religious leaders who exhort their followers to help the poor, love their neighbors, and behave morally but become wealthy through donations to the church and carry love for certain neighbors to an immoral extreme as defined by their own professed religious beliefs, and (3) the contradiction between talk of a loving god and a world in which children starve to death and innocent people are tortured and killed. Issues with religion may arise due to the nature of fundamentalists — insisting that their holy texts are literally true.[note 6] This leads to attempts by such fundamentalists to undermine education by censoring scientific knowledge that seems to contradict their beliefs.[note 7] Intelligent design is a prominent case (see Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District). Often, this doesn’t sit well with moderate believers, especially those who may be on the verge of losing their faith, especially when the evidence provided by daily experience suggests that there may be no events that cannot be explained by common sense and scientific study.

Other issues that atheists have with religion involve the characteristics of supposed gods. Atheists sometimes view the idea that a supreme all-knowing deity would have the narcissistic need to be worshiped and would punish anyone for worshiping a different god (or none at all) to be perverse.

Lastly, formerly religious atheists often report having had their belief system unsettled by a lack of evidence supporting the notion of the supernatural.

Burden of proof[edit]

It is time that we admitted that faith is nothing more than the license religious people give one another to keep believing when reasons fail.

—Sam Harris, Letter to a Christian Nation

Arguments related to the burden of proof deal with whether atheists must disprove the existence of gods or theists must provide evidence in their favor. Conventionally, the burden of proof lies with someone proposing a positive idea — or as Karl Popper fans would put it, those proposing something must present the idea in such a way that it would be theoretically falsifiable. By this standard, atheists have no need to prove anything; they just need to render arguments for the existence of God as non-compelling. However, the ubiquity of religion historically and even in some modern societies has often resulted in attempts to shift the burden of proof to atheists, who would then be bizarrely required to prove a negative. Assuming that God (or gods) exist is known as presuppositionalism and has always been a key tenet of Christian apologetics, but is usually rejected by more sensible scholars. The absurdity of being asked to prove a negative is demonstrated in Bertrand Russell’s teapot thought experiment — where no matter how hard you look, you can’t thoroughly disprove the belief that a teapot is out there in space, orbiting the sun somewhere between Earth and Mars. This sort of presuppositional thinking is illogical, so asking an atheist to disprove God is an unreasonable request.

Occam’s razor can also be invoked as a guide to making the fewest assumptions, and assuming that a specific God exists a priori is a major assumption that should be avoided. In the best case for theists, the lack of evidence for gods indicates that without supporting evidence, the default position on God must be either weak-ish atheism or agnosticism rather than theism. Proponents of atheism argue that the burden of proof has not been met by those proposing that a god exists, let alone the specific gods described by major religions.

Logical[edit]

If someone doesn’t value evidence, what evidence are you going to provide to prove that they should value it? If someone doesn’t value logic, what logical argument could you provide to show the importance of logic?

—Sam Harris

Logical arguments try to show that God cannot possibly exist (at least as described). Barring any escape hatch arguments like Goddidit, some properties of God are incompatible with each other or known facts about the world, and thus a creator-god cannot be a logically consistent and existent entity. These arguments are heavily dependent on the use of common descriptions of the Abrahamic God as a target: things such as omnipotence, omnipresence, and omnibenevolence. As a result, they are not as useful in refuting the claims of, say, neopaganism and are also vulnerable to the tactic of moving the goalposts by changing the descriptions of God.

The omnipotence paradox postulates that true omnipotence is not logically possible and/or not compatible with omniscience. This is primarily a logical argument based on whether an omnipotent being could limit its own power — if yes, it would cease to be omnipotent; if no, it wouldn’t be omnipotent in the first place. Hence the paradox shows, through contradiction, that God cannot exist as usually described.

Other logical arguments prove that god is incompatible with our scientific knowledge of reality. The problem of evil states that a good god wouldn’t permit gratuitous evil, yet such evil occurs, so a good god does not exist.[7] The argument from design is often given as proof of a creator, but it raises the following logical question: if the world is so complex that it must have had a creator, then the creator must be at least as complex and must therefore have a creator, and this would have to have had a more complex creator ad infinitum. Also, the argument from design does not offer evidence for any specific religion; while it could be taken as support for the existence of a god or gods, it doesn’t argue for the Christian God any more than, say, the Hindu pantheon.

While believers hasten to point out that their gods don’t need to follow logic, let alone the known laws of physics, this is really a case of special pleading and doesn’t so much prove anything itself. Atheists, therefore, tend to reject these counters to the logical arguments as they mostly beg the question of a creator’s existence and, very arbitrarily, plead that a creator can be exempt from the same logic used to «prove» its existence.

Evidential[edit]

I know of no society in human history that ever suffered because its people became too desirous of evidence in support of their core beliefs.

—Sam Harris, Letter to a Christian Nation

At the root of the worldview of most atheists is evidence, and atheists point out that sufficient evidence for the existence of gods is currently very lacking, and thus there is no reason to believe in them. Evidential arguments are less ambitious than logical arguments because, rather than proving that there is a reason not to believe in a god, they show that there is no reason to believe in a god (See Burden of proof above). It is important to remember that what constitutes sufficient evidence can be quite subjective, although rationalism and science offer some standardization. Various «holy books» exist that testify to the existence of gods and claim that alleged miracles and personal experiences all constitute evidence in favor of the existence of a god character. However, atheists reject these as insufficient because the naturalistic explanations (tracing authors of the holy texts, psychological experiments, scientific experiments to explain experiences, and so on) are more plausible. Indeed, the existence of plausible naturalistic explanations renders supernatural explanations obsolete. In addition, these books make claims for various faiths, so to accept the Bible’s stories as evidence, one would have to accept the miracle stories from other religions’ holy books.

Atheists often cite evidence that processes attributed to a god might also occur naturally as evidential arguments. If evolution and the big bang are true, why would a creator god have needed them?[8] Occam’s razor makes theistic explanations less compelling.

Experiential[edit]

«God», «immortality of the soul», «redemption», «beyond» — Without exception, concepts to which I have never devoted any attention, or time; not even as a child. Perhaps I have never been childlike enough for them?
I do not by any means know atheism as a result; even less as an event: It is a matter of course with me, from instinct. I am too inquisitive, too questionable, too exuberant to stand for any gross answer. God is a gross answer, an indelicacy against us thinkers — at bottom merely a gross prohibition for us: you shall not think!

—Nietzsche, in Ecce Homo

Many atheists argue, in a similar vein to the born-again Christian who «just knows» that God exists, that the day-to-day experience of the atheist demonstrates quite clearly that God does not. This is because they have an image in their heads of what this «God» would have to look like, viz., an entity in the vein of the God of the Old Testament who runs around zapping entire cities, turning people into pillars of salt, and generally answering people’s prayers in flashes of fire and brimstone — or, answering prayers for the victory of a given football team — but not answering those made on behalf of starving children in the third world.[note 8]

Atheist clergy[edit]

Nobody knows for sure how many clergy members are secretly atheists (or are secretly on the fence, with serious doubts about their religion). But almost everyone I’ve spoken with in Clergy Project strongly suspects that the numbers are high.

— Greta Christina[9]

Studying religion in depth during training for clerical work can lead a person to examine religious ideas critically. The study of Christian theology will include the whole of the Bible and include historical background, which can lead to rational doubt.[9][10]

In 2011, the Freedom From Religion Foundation and the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Science and Reason launched a confidential support group for clergy who no longer believe: the Clergy Project. By December 2012, the group had almost 400 members. One of the founders of the Clergy Project is Dan Barker, co-president of the Freedom From Religion Foundation, who was an evangelical preacher for nineteen years before becoming an atheist.[11] Gretta VosperWikipedia is openly atheist as a minister, and her congregation supports her.

Freethought Blogger Greta Christina articulates a possible effect of clergy openly leaving Christianity on their parishioners’ beliefs. The more traditional position of clergy is that they are somehow endowed with answers to all questions of faith. If these trained religious authorities say they have no answers to normal «Crises of Faith», even more, if some suggest the most reasonable answer is atheism, lay Christians will find continuing their belief more difficult.[12] It is worth noting that modern clergy trained in most US or UK universities are discouraged from claiming to be exempt from such crises of faith and to encourage people to share a «journey of spiritual discovery». Perhaps atheism must simply be accepted as a potential outcome of that endeavor.

Who are atheists?[edit]

Because atheism is effectively a lack of inherent religious or political ideology, there is very little that unifies all atheists.

That said, atheists do tend to fit a certain profile.

Demographics[edit]

Specific research on atheists conducted in 2006 suggests that the true proportion of atheists is 2%[13][14][15] to 4% in the United States, 17% in Great Britain, and 32% in France. A 2020 YouGov report stated that 27% of Britons believed in a god, and 41% believed in neither a God nor a higher power.[16]

According to a 2012 WIN-Gallup International poll, 13% of the world identifies as «atheist», 23% identifies as «not religious», and 59% identifies as «religious»; these results were 3% more «atheist», 9% less «religious», and 6% more «non-religious» than 2005. Of note, in the United States, 13% fewer people identified as «religious».[17]

Education and IQ[edit]

Many studies have shown that some groups with higher intelligence have more atheists.[18] A 2002 meta-analysis of 39 eligible studies from 1927 to 2002 was published in Mensa Magazine and concluded that atheists are more likely to be of higher intelligence than their religious counterparts.[19] The American Sociological Association found that higher intelligence was linked with atheism and liberal political ideology.[20][21]

Likewise, there are many studies that suggest people with more education are generally atheists. According to an article in the prestigious science journal Nature in 1998, the belief in a personal god or afterlife was very low among the members of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences. Only 7% believed in a personal god compared to more than 85% of the general U.S. population.[22] A 2012 WIN-Gallup International poll found that people with a college education were 16% less likely to describe themselves as religious than those without a complete high school education.[17] A survey conducted by the Times of India in 2015 revealed that 22% of IIT-Bombay graduates do not believe in the existence of God, while another 30% do not know.[23] According to a Harvard survey, more atheists and agnostics are entering Harvard University, one of the top-ranked schools in America, than Catholics and Protestants. According to the same study, atheists and agnostics also make up a much higher percentage of the students than the general public.[24][25] However, the reverse idea, that atheists are generally more educated, is not necessarily true, in at least in some cases: a Pew Center global study ranked the religiously unaffiliated (including atheists and agnostics) as the third most educated group, higher than Buddhists (fourth), Muslims (fifth), and Hindus (sixth), but lower than Christians (second) and Jews (first).[26]

But of course, correlation does not imply causation. What might account for these links between education, intelligence, and atheism? Perhaps it has to do with skepticism. In 2015, researchers found that atheists score higher on cognitive reflection tests than theists, stating that «disbelieving seems to require deliberative cognitive ability».[27] On the other hand, perhaps religious attitudes have nothing to do with it. Education professor Yong Zhao asserts that countries with such differing religious attitudes succeed, while countries with other differing religious attitudes fail, simply due to the excessive workload and testing present in the Confucian cultural circle, the students within which make for outstanding test takers.[28]

There’s another caveat: while evidence suggests that there is at least some link between atheism, intelligence, and education, that does not mean that religion makes people dumber. Obviously, there are plenty of smart religious people, and contrary to the conflict thesis, there have been times when religion and education when went hand in hand. However, the fact that some famous scientists were religious is not sufficient proof that religion makes people smarter either. At best, it’s anecdotal evidence, and arguments that point towards famous religious people ignore many of the social factors behind faith, such as the fact that throughout history, atheism was fiercely persecuted or at least socially unacceptable.

Income[edit]

Studies have shown that groups with more income have significantly more atheists. A 2012 WIN-Gallup International poll found that people in the highest quintile of income were 17% less likely to describe themselves as religious than the bottom quintile.[17] This is likely because those with more education tend to have higher incomes.

A recent study published in the Annals of Family Medicine suggests that, despite what some may think, religiousness does not appear to significantly affect how much physicians care for the underserved.[29]

Race, gender, sexuality[edit]

The Pew Research Center (2014) reports that in the US:[30]:14,87

Whites continue to be more likely than both blacks and Hispanics to identify as religiously unaffiliated; 24% of whites say they have no religion, compared with 20% of Hispanics and 18% of blacks. But the religiously unaffiliated have grown (and Christians have declined) as a share of the population within all three of these racial and ethnic groups. …

Among respondents who identify themselves as gay, lesbian, or bisexual, fully 41% are religiously unaffiliated, and fewer than half (48%) describe themselves as Christians. Non-Christian faiths also are represented in the gay community at higher rates than among the general public, with 11% of gay, lesbian, and bisexual respondents identifying with faiths other than Christianity.

The Pew report also reported that 57% of «unaffiliated» were male, and 43% were female.

Atheists are becoming more numerous but also more diverse. White middle-class men such as Dawkins, Harris, and Hitchens no longer define the movement. One blogger argues that

[T]he movement has become much more diverse — not just in the obvious ways of gender, race, and so on, but simply in terms of how many viewpoints are coming to the table. The sheer number of people who are seen in some way as leaders… has gone up significantly…. And the increasing diversity in gender, race, class, and so on are important. We have a long way to go in this regard, but we’re doing much, much better than we were.»[31]

Other atheists[Who?] strongly disagree and want to see the atheist movement focus on philosophical arguments against religion and pseudoscience.[31]

African American atheists are a small minority (2% of the American population) facing severe prejudice.

In most African-American communities, it is more acceptable to be a criminal who goes to church on Sunday, while selling drugs to kids all week, than to be an atheist who … contributes to society and supports his family.

—Author James White[32]

Despite this, black atheists are joining online groups and giving each other confidence. Also, online groups progress to arranging offline meetings.[32] Atheists of color frequently feel they have different priorities from white atheist groups; they may be allied to faith groups that help poor blacks and fight racial discrimination. Atheists of color also form their own groups focusing more on economic and social problems their communities face and hoping general atheist groups will focus more on these issues in the future. Sikivu Hutchinson is one of many atheists of color campaigning against injustice faced by poor people, black people, LGBT people, women, and other oppressed groups.[33][34]

Atheism in history[edit]

Some people think this is the symbol for atheism.[note 9] Wikipedia’s «atheism project» used it as a logo once, before switching to a picture of the word atheoi from Papyrus 46.Wikipedia[35] Nowadays the template has no logo at all.

Isn’t it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it, too?

—Douglas Adams[note 10]

There has been a long history of rational people who have not accepted superstitious or magical explanations of natural phenomena and have felt that «gods» are unnecessary for the world. The Eastern philosophy of Buddhism is broadly atheistic, explicitly eschewing the notion of a creation myth. In the Western world, there have been atheists for almost as long as there has been philosophy and writing. Some of the most famous thinkers of the ancient world have been critical of belief in deities or eschewed religion entirely — many favoring logic and rationality to inform their lives and their actions rather than religious texts. Democritus, who originally conceived of the atom, hypothesized a world without magic holding it together. Critias,Wikipedia one of the Thirty Tyrants of Athens, preceded Marx when he called religion a tool to control the masses.

Perhaps the best example of an explicitly atheistic ancient philosophy is the CharvakaWikipedia (or Cārvāka) school of thought, which originated in India in the first millennium BCE. The Charvakas posited a materialistic universe, rejected the idea of an afterlife, and emphasized the need to enjoy this life.[36]

Modern atheism in the Western world can be traced to the Age of Enlightenment. Important thinkers of that era who were atheists include Baron d’Holbach and Denis Diderot. The Scottish philosopher David Hume, though not explicitly avowing atheism, wrote critical essays on religions and religious beliefs (his most famous being a critique of the belief in miracles) and posited naturalistic explanations for the origins of religion in The Natural History of Religion,Wikipedia as well as criticizing traditional arguments for the existence of God in Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion.Wikipedia

Not until recently, however, did the term known as «atheism» begin to carry its current connotation. It is a neutral or unimportant label in many countries worldwide. The nation of New Zealand, for example, has thrice elected an agnostic woman (Helen Clark) as Prime Minister, followed by another agnostic leader (John Key), then another (Jacinda Ardern), and then the current leader (Chris Hipkins). Several UK prime ministers have been atheists, including Clement Attlee and the former deputy PM, Nick Clegg. Also, the former Prime Minister of Australia, Julia Gillard, is openly atheist, and at least one other former Australian PM was atheist. However, the term carries a heavy stigma in more religious areas such as the United States or Saudi Arabia. Indeed, prejudice against atheists is so high in the United States that one study found that they are America’s most distrusted minority.[37]

The reason for such attitudes towards atheists in these nations is unclear. Firstly, there is no stated creed with which to disagree (except perhaps for «strong» atheists, whose only belief is that there are no gods). Nor are atheists generally organized into lobbies or interest groups or political action committees (at least none that wield massive power), unlike the many groups that lobby on behalf of various religions. And yet an atheist would be the least likely to be elected President of the United States. According to the American Values Survey, about 67% of all voters would be uncomfortable with an atheist president, and no other group — including Mormons, African Americans, and homosexuals — would lose so much of the potential vote based on one single trait alone.[38][39][40] One potential reason for this is that in the United States, Christian groups have managed to push and implant the concept that without religion, there can be no morality — often playing to people’s needs for absolutes and written rules — absolute morality is presented as something inherently true and achievable only by believers.

Misconceptions about atheists[edit]

Atheist Stalin says not to confuse him with those non-communist atheists.

The mistrust of atheism is often accompanied by snarl words, straw man arguments, and other myths and legends to denigrate the idea of disbelief in established gods.

Fundamentalist Christians have a penchant for revising history to suggest that the bad acts of atheists are due to a lack of belief in a god (usually the Christian God). Attempts by fundamentalist Christians to associate Hitler,[note 11] Stalin,[note 12] and any number of terrible characters with atheism indulge the association fallacy and would be laughably trivial were the smear not so effective at influencing uncritical thinkers.

Atheism as an organized religion[edit]

Atheism is a religion in the same way as ‘off’ is a television station.

—Ben Emerson

One of the widest misconceptions, often used as a strong criticism, is that atheism is a religion. However, while there are secular religions, atheism is commonly defined as «no religion». To expand the definition of «religion» to include atheism would thus destroy any use the word «religion» would have in describing anything. It is quite often pointed out that calling atheism a religion is akin to stating that the act of not collecting stamps is a hobby or that being unemployed is an occupation. Following this, atheists do not worship Charles Darwin or any other individual. Although some think atheism requires evolution to be a complete worldview,[note 13] there is no worship of anything or anyone in atheism, and acceptance of evolution isn’t exclusive to atheists. For that matter, an atheist does not have to accept the evidence for evolution.[note 14] If atheists worshiped Darwin as a god, they wouldn’t be atheists. Basically, «atheism» is a word for a negative. However, this leads to a few semantic issues.

This confuses the religious because they are used to religious identity as a declaration of allegiance to a view rather than separation. This confusion leads them to assert that a denial of their religion must be an avowal of another. They then declare the so-called New Atheists as hypocrites for denigrating religion while sticking to an unstated one of their own or declare that science has an epistemology and religion has an epistemology. Therefore, science is just another faith (when religion’s problem is that science’s epistemology provably works much better than religion’s).

Atheism is actually a religion — indeed, much like «not collecting stamps» might be called a hobby, or «not smoking» might be called a habit.

—TheThinkingAtheist[42]

A standard response is that if atheism is a religion, «bald» is a hair color, «not kicking a kitten» is a form of animal abuse, and so on. Another is to note that if the definition of religion was expanded enough to legitimately include atheism — say, by defining religion as «any philosophy on life» — practically everything in the world would be a religion, such as socio-economic policies or views on equality.[note 15]

A new movement of atheist churches appears to be developing (such as Sunday Assembly and Oasis), but they do not worship; rather, they are places where like-minded people get together on Sunday mornings to have fun, celebrate life, and whatever. This is a relatively new phenomenon, and its prospects for the future are unclear.[43][44]

Atheists, as a whole, are not a unified group, so accusations that «atheists» are doing x, y, and z hold little water. In fact, a disaffection with organized religion and the potential for groupthink causes many believers to abandon the faith and come out as atheists. It doesn’t follow that such individuals would happily join another organized group. Debate within the atheistic community is robust — debates about whether there is even an «atheistic community» at all, for instance — and the fact that this debate exists presupposes no dogmatic mandate (or at least not a widely followed one) from an organized group. It does follow from this lack of organization that there is no atheist equivalent to the Bible, Koran, or other holy texts. There are, of course, atheist writings, but one does not need to adhere to opinions held by, say, Friedrich Nietzsche, Richard Dawkins, or Christopher Hitchens to be considered an atheist. Some atheists will actively oppose what these kinds of authors do and say. In fact, some atheists wish they could believe.[45]

Atheists just hate God[edit]

Believers sometimes denigrate atheists because they «hate God». This, however, makes no sense. It is impossible for atheists to «hate God», as they don’t believe in any god, and one cannot hate something they don’t believe in. People who make such assertive claims toward atheists are confusing atheism with misotheism. It is, however, possible for atheists to object to the character of a god as its followers, holy texts, and supplemental materials describe it — for example, many atheists see YHWH as being incredibly cruel by their standards.[note 16]

Atheists have no morals[edit]

What I’m asking you to entertain is that there is nothing we need to believe on insufficient evidence in order to have deeply ethical and spiritual lives.

—Sam Harris

Morality is one of the larger issues facing the world, and many religions and believers openly express the notion that they have a monopoly on deciding, explaining, and enforcing moral judgments. Many religious people will assume that since morals rise from (their) god, one cannot have morals without (their) god. Contrary to the claims of such people, «no gods» does not equal «no morality». There are strong humanistic, cultural, and genetic rationales for the existence of morality and ethical behavior, and many people, not just atheists, recognize this fact.

Some atheist groups are doing charitable work traditionally done by religious organizations like funding scholarships as an alternative to faith-based scholarships,[note 17] and at least one atheist group volunteers to do environmental protection work.[47]

Indeed, it could be argued that accusing atheists of having no morals is sometimes a psychological projection from people who have themselves not developed healthy intrinsic moral sensibilities and responses, and for whom, theoretically (and sometimes by their own admission), an external written code such as that in the Bible is the only thing stopping them from being a psychopathic criminal. As an adage quoted by ex-evangelical author and blogger Valerie Tarico goes: «If you can’t tell right from wrong without appealing to an authority or a sacred text, what you lack is not religion but compassion.»[48]

Typical examples of this trope invoke either Hitler (whose supposed atheism is rather dubious) or some of the genocidal communist dictators (mainly Stalin, Mao, or Pol Pot). Setting aside the dubious Godwin’s Law example(s), using Stalin, Mao, or Pol Pot as examples of the bad consequences of atheism has the common weakness that it is far from clear that it was their atheism (rather than, say, their political ideologies and/or ruthless ambitions) that caused their murderous actions. This is in stark contrast to the numerous and varied examples of the very explicit use of religion to justify killing, maiming, raping, enslaving, or otherwise mistreating your fellow man, including notorious instances of deities outright ordering such behavior in sacred, religious texts, with the Old Testament YHWH’s command to exterminate the Amalekites being just one particularly horrendous case in point.

There have been attempts by psychologists and social scientists to investigate whether atheists are more or less moral than religious believers. Many of these experiments have been inconclusive, finding no difference.[49]

This attitude has even been used to justify hate and discrimination and is the reason why atheists are so distrusted in the US.[50]

Atheism = communism[edit]

In the US, where criticism of atheism is common, it often works well for politicians and evangelists to compare atheism to the «evils» of communism or even to communism itself. These «evils» are not inextricably fused with the values of atheism in reality. Although most orthodox Marxists are atheists (Marxism treats religion as a «false consciousness» that needs to be eliminated (though not necessarily by force or proselytization)), the atrocities wrought by Stalin and others were not on account of their being atheists, but on account of their being totalitarians and authoritarians: just as Hitler’s crimes against humanity weren’t on account of his believing in God. Additionally, there have been many anti-communists who were atheists or agnostics, such as Ayn Rand and the computer pioneer John von Neumann.[note 18] In North Korea, one of the only 5 countries where communism still exists (the others being China, Vietnam, Laos, and Cuba), it is mandatory to believe (or pretend to believe) that the Kim dynasty consists of people with superhuman powers. In addition, it’s worth noting that their head of state de jure is not actually Kim Jong Un, but the spirit of his late grandfather, Kim Il Sung — who is practically revered as a God himself.

Misconceptions of definition[edit]

Atheism is not a philosophy; it is not even a view of the world; it is simply an admission of the obvious. In fact, «atheism» is a term that should not even exist. No one ever needs to identify himself as a «non-astrologer» or a «non-alchemist.» We do not have words for people who doubt that Elvis is still alive or that aliens have traversed the galaxy only to molest ranchers and their cattle. Atheism is nothing more than the noises reasonable people make in the presence of unjustified religious beliefs.

—Sam Harris[51]

Atheism and agnosticism are not mutually exclusive, and atheists are not «actually agnostic because no one can ever know whether God exists.» This is a highly contested point among religious believers and atheistic philosophers alike, as most, if not all, think atheists would happily change their minds given the right evidence and thus could be considered «agnostic». However, this conflates the ideas of belief and knowledge. Atheism is a statement of a lack of belief and not a lack of knowledge — which is often accepted on all sides of the theistic debate. Atheism assumes that it is rational to think that gods don’t exist based on logic and lack of evidence.

Conversely, agnostics state that the lack of knowledge cannot inform their opinion. Some agnostic atheists can be either weak or strong. It is at least logically possible for a theist to be an agnostic (e.g., «I believe in a pantheon of lobsterish zoomorphic deities, but cannot prove this with evidence, and acknowledge and embrace that my belief is rooted in faith») — but it is markedly difficult to find anyone who will fess up to such a position.

Opposition to the term «atheism»[edit]

The «Scarlet A» of the Out Campaign[52]

I decided to give up on being an atheist because I discovered that I had nothing to say during a blowjob.

—Robert Anton Wilson

One difficulty with the term «atheism» is that it defines what its adherents do not believe in rather than in what they do believe in. The lack of positive statements of belief has led to the fact that there is really no overarching organization that speaks for atheists (some would regard this as a good thing, keeping atheism from becoming an organized religion) and has led to the comparison that organizing atheists is like «herding cats», i.e., impossible. The only thing that unites atheists may be a lack of belief in gods; thus, an overarching organization representing them would be physically impossible.

Primarily because of the prevalence of extreme discrimination against atheists, people have tried to come up with more positive terms or campaigns to get the godless philosophy noticed and respected. This allows atheists to feel more united and happy with their beliefs (or lack of), but has also led to organizations that will help them in situations, such as legal cases, where individuals couldn’t do it on their own. The most prominent examples:

  • The «Brights Movement» describes itself as composed of people with a naturalistic worldview, though its name might be self-defeating on the «helping make the godless more respected» side.
  • Naturalist is the preferred term used by A. C. Grayling and others. Grayling argues that a statement such as «I believe in naturalistic explanations» has the advantage of being a positive statement about what is believed and does not narrowly define the speaker in terms of one particular lack of belief.
  • Freethinker is another term meaning something similar; the philosophy behind it is known as «freethought».

To date, none of these alternative descriptions seems to have taken hold a great deal, and the term of choice for most people remains «atheist». «Freethinker» is probably the term with the most support, dating back to the 19th century. «Naturalism» may be the second most popular, although the name may lead people to confuse it with naturism or with some kind of eco-hippy ideal. «Bright» is the most recent term invented and is currently the most controversial and divisive. Supporters of the Brights movement see it as a positive and constructive redefinition (on par with the re-branding of homosexuality with the word «gay», which until then primarily meant «happy» or «joyous»). In contrast, its detractors see it as nothing more than a shameless attempt to turn atheism into organized religion and the use of «bright» as a cynical attempt to appear more intelligent and, by implication, to make their opponents seem less so. Less commonly, some may identify as «nontheist» in an «I’m an atheist but don’t want to make a big deal of it» way.

In some contexts, words such as «rationalist» and «skeptic» may also be code words for «atheist». Although not all atheists need to be rationalists, and not all rationalists need to be atheists, the connection is more in the method a person uses to derive their beliefs rather than what their beliefs actually are.

As in the quote above, some who have expressed criticism of religion, among them Richard Dawkins, have pointed out that the word atheism enforces theism as a social norm, as modern languages usually have no established terms for people who do not believe in other supernatural phenomena (a-fairyist for people who do not believe in fairies, a-unicornist, a-alchemist, a-astrologer, etc.).

Religious views on atheism[edit]

With the existence of deities being the central belief of almost all religious systems, it is not surprising that atheism is seen as more threatening than competing belief systems, regardless of how different they may be. This often manifests in the statement that «freedom of religion doesn’t include freedom from religion». It is also important for theists that the political hierarchy, the priesthood, should do their utmost to discourage dissent — as true believers make better tithe givers. Most religious codes are more than a bit irritated with those who do not believe. The Bible, for example, includes clear ad hominem attacks on non-believers, such as The fool has said in his heart, «There is no God.» (Psalm 14:1 and Psalm 53:1), while the penalty for apostasy in Islamic law is death — and this is still endorsed today.

One author has proposed a correction to Psalm 53, as follows:[53]

The fool hath said in his heart, «I know there is a God, and just one God. I know his name, I know his mind and his plans for me. I have a personal relationship with God’s son. I know where we came from and what happens after we die. I know if I merely believe in God I shall live forever in paradise. And all I have to do is pray to God, and all my wishes will come true.»

In the USA, the increased public visibility of atheism — what some commentators call the «New Atheism», seen in the popularity of books like The God Delusion — has brought renewed energy to the debate between believers and non-believers.[54] As part of that debate, some believers have tried to stop what they think of as the “irresponsible” promotion of atheism. Their efforts range from material that has academic pretensions to arguments that are plainly abusive, focusing on «smacking» atheists with PRATT arguments regarding how great the Bible isn’t is — and, of course, a heavy bias towards their own religion being true.[55] What these arguments tend to have in common is that they are less about providing arguments for religious belief and more about keeping atheists quiet, with questions such as «don’t you have anything better to do than talk about the God you don’t believe in?» or arguing that «faith is better than reason so shut up».[56] It’s not entirely unexpected that this would be the thrust of several anti-atheist arguments — after all, according to several Christians in influential positions, even the mere knowledge that atheism exists can be dangerous.[57]

Atheistic view of the Bible[edit]

Atheists may view the Bible and other religious works as literature, fiction, mythology, epic, philosophy, agitprop, irrelevant, history, or various combinations thereof. Many atheists may find the book repulsively ignorant and primitive, while others may find inspiration from certain passages even though they don’t believe in the supernatural events and miracles mentioned in the Bible. Many atheists see religious works as interesting historical records of the myths and beliefs of humanity. By definition, atheists do not believe any religious text to be divinely inspired truth: in other words, «Dude, it’s just a book» (or, in some cases, a somewhat random collection of different books).

Several types of evidence support the idea that «it’s just a book». Textual analysis of the various books of the Bible reveals vastly differing writing styles among the authors of the individual books of the Old and New Testaments, suggesting that these works represent many different (human) voices and not a sole, divinely inspired voice. The existence of Apocrypha, writings dating from the time of the Bible that were not included in official canon by Jews or Christians (and peppered with mystical events such as encounters with angels, demons, and dragons), further suggests that «divine authorship» is not a reliable claim. Within Christianity, there are differences among sects regarding which books are Apocrypha and which are included in the Bible, or which are included under the heading «Apocrypha», indicating that they constitute holy writings but are not meant to be taken as literally as the other books. The Book of Tobit, for example, is included in the Catholic Bible but considered Apocrypha by Protestants and is wholly absent from the Jewish Bible.

Another problem with the «divine authorship» of the Bible is the existence of texts that predate it but contain significant similarities to certain Biblical stories. The best-known among these is the flood story, found in numerous versions in texts from across the ancient Middle East, including the Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh, which bears textual similarities with the Biblical account. Another such story with apparent Babylonian origin is that of the Tower of Babel. It has been suggested that some of these stories were appropriated by the Jews during the Babylonian exile.

Studies of the history of the Bible, although not undertaken with the intent of disproving it (in fact, many Biblical historians set out to prove the Bible’s veracity), shed light on the Bible’s nature as a set of historical documents which were written by humans and were affected by the cultural circumstances surrounding their creation. It should be noted that this type of rational discourse neither proves nor requires an atheistic worldview: one can believe that the Bible is not the infallible word of God either because one adheres to a non-Judeo-Christian religion or because one is a Christian or Jew but not a Biblical literalist.[note 19] These criticisms of Biblical «truth» counter the arguments of fundamentalists, who are among atheism’s most vociferous critics.

Persecution of atheists[edit]

Atheists and the nonreligious face persecution and discrimination in many nations worldwide. In Bangladesh, Egypt, Indonesia, Kuwait, Pakistan, and Jordan, atheists (and others) are denied free speech through blasphemy laws. In Afghanistan, Iran, Maldives, Mauritania,Wikipedia Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan, being an atheist can carry the death penalty. In many nations, citizens are forced to register as adherents of a limited range of religions, which denies atheists and adherents of alternative religions the right to free expression. Atheists can lose their right to citizenship and face restrictions on their right to marry.[58][59] In many parts of the world, atheists face increasing prejudice and hate speech similar to that which ethnic and religious minorities suffer. Saudi Arabia introduced new laws banning atheist thought in any form; a Muslim expressing religious views the government disliked was falsely called an atheist and sentenced to seven years in prison and 600 lashes. In Egypt, young people talking about their right to state atheist ideas on television or on YouTube were detained.[60]

In Islamic theocracies[edit]

In most (if not all) Islamic theocracies, being an atheist can mean prison or even execution. In Bangladesh, notably, atheists risk murder. The Center for Inquiry is raising money to get atheists and sometimes their families out of countries where their lives are in danger.[61]

In the United States[edit]

No, I don’t know that atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots. This is one nation under God.

—George H. W. Bush[62]

Research in the American Sociological Review finds that atheists are the group Americans least relate to for shared vision or want to marry into their family.[63]

Group in Question This Group Does Not at All Agree with
My Vision of American Society:
I Would Disapprove if My Child Wanted
to Marry a Member of This Group:
Atheist 39.6% 47.6%
Muslim 26.3% 33.5%
Homosexual 22.6% N/A
Conservative Christian    13.5% 6.9%
Recent Immigrant 12.5% N/A
Hispanic 7.6% 18.5%
Jew 7.4% 11.8%
Asian American 7.0% 18.5%
African American 4.6% 27.2%
White American 2.2% 2.3%

From the report’s conclusions

To be an atheist in such an environment is not to be one more religious minority among many in a strongly pluralist society. Rather, Americans construct the atheist as the symbolic representation of one who rejects the basis for moral solidarity and cultural membership in American society altogether.

A 2012 Gallup poll showed that presidential candidates who are open atheists are the least likely demographic to be voted into office.[64]

Group in Question I would vote for a presidential candidate who is___: I would not vote for a presidential candidate who is___:
Black 96% 4%
A woman 95% 5%
Catholic 94% 5%
Hispanic 92% 7%
Jewish 91% 7%
Mormon 80% 18%
Gay or lesbian 68% 30%
Muslim 58% 40%
An atheist 54% 43%

However, in 2015, a new Gallup poll was released that indicated that atheism was no longer at the bottom of the list, indicating a bit of progress. Unfortunately, some groups’ approval ratings decreased.[65]

Group in Question I would vote for a presidential candidate who is___: I would not vote for a presidential candidate who is___:
Catholic 93% 6%
Black 92% 7%
A woman 92% 8%
Hispanic 91% 8%
Jewish 91% 7%
Mormon 81% 18%
Gay or lesbian 74% 24%
Evangelical Christian 73% 25%
Muslim 60% 38%
An atheist 58% 40%
A socialist 47% 50%

In some parts of the United States, open atheists may be attacked, spat on, turned out of the family home, sent to Bible camp, and forced to pretend religiosity.[66]

In the US, atheists are the least trusted and liked people out of all social groups, possibly because of their superior knowledge[67] of actual religious content. They top the charts when people are asked, «who would you least trust to be elected President» or «who would you least want to marry your beautiful, sweet, innocent Christian daughter.»[68][69] It probably doesn’t help that the U.S. is one of the most religious developed countries in the world.[70]

Many have lost jobs and been harassed out of their homes for lack of any belief that could act as motivation to cause harm. Chuck Norris infamously claimed that he would like to tattoo «In God We Trust» onto atheist foreheads before booting them out of Jesusland,[71] possibly to work as slaves in the Mines of Morîa (he claims this is a joke, but few actually laughed). More extreme fundamentalists seem to want them outright banned from existence; blogger Andrew Schlafly will almost instantly ban anyone from his website just for not believing in God or even using the dreaded a-word in one’s username, and George H. W. Bush declared, «I don’t know that atheists should be considered as citizens, nor should they be considered patriots. This is one nation under God,» questioning whether anyone who disbelieves in God should even be allowed to vote (or at least be allowed to vote themselves out of persecution).[72] A creationist group has refined this way of thinking, stating that atheists and other «evolutionists» should be disenfranchised, as anyone who believes the theory of evolution is clearly mentally incompetent.[73]

Six US states have laws on the books that prohibit atheists from holding public office.[74] This is despite a U.S. Supreme Court ruling — Torcaso v. Watkins (1961)[75] — prohibiting discrimination against atheist officeholders.[76] These states are:

  • Arkansas
  • Maryland
  • North Carolina
  • South Carolina
  • Tennessee
  • Texas

If atheism isn’t a hanging offense in these places, they probably wish it were.[citation NOT needed][note 20]

In Europe[edit]

In some European countries, being an atheist is unremarkable.

France has an entirely secular culture, with a suitably large proportion of the population declaring «no religion».[note 21] In Scandinavia, while most people are members of their respective national churches, irreligiosity is widespread, and being openly atheist is entirely unremarkable.[77] In the UK, Tony Blair’s spin-doctor Alistar Campbell was led to declare that «we don’t do god»,[78] and Tony himself said that he kept quiet about religion because people would think he was «a nutter». The previous deputy Prime Minister was an atheist, while the Prime Minister himself has said that his Church of England faith «comes and goes». Overall, atheists in Europe aren’t demonized as in America and other countries led by fundamentalists. However, British Muslims who become atheists face ostracism, threats, and physical abuse.[79]

Conversely, in Poland, 95 percent of Poles identify themselves as Catholic, even though secular opinions are increasing.[80]

In Australia[edit]

From 2010 to 2013, Australia had a prime minister, Julia Gillard, who defined herself as an atheist. Many Australians despised her for a whole bunch of (potentially legitimate) reasons, but being an atheist wasn’t one of them.

Why even argue with theists?[edit]

The question remains, why should an atheist be held to a theist’s definitions, their rules of argumentation, and their playing field? Ultimately, atheists don’t need to make a case for atheism because the assertive (or positive) claim is made by those who say «God exists». By the rules of logic, science, and even law, the ones making the assertion must be the ones who prove their claim, and not the other way around. Otherwise, atheists would also be held accountable to make a case for being an athorist (someone who does not believe in the Norse god Thor), etc., and almost everyone would be held accountable for being an «adragonist» or an «aunicornist» and an «adinosaurslivingwithpeopleist».

One reason that a person might argue with a theist is the same reason one might argue with a friend who is convinced she was abducted by aliens or who thinks children are better off without vaccinations: because we care about them, and the choices they make can be harmful to themselves and their children; because living a life of fear out of an illusion seems an awful way to live. However, the people with this motivation are generally known as «do-gooders» or «busybodies», and such arguments can be counter-productive in that they further cement the delusions.

Another common motivation for arguing with theists is political. Theists make up a majority of the world’s population and, in many countries, a majority of the governing elite; they have often appealed to religion as a means to stay in power, often to draw a distinction between their subjects and foreigners (as in the Nazis’ pandering to Christianity, or, more recently, in most European Islamophobia).

Hence, a strategy for subverting such elites is to dispute the religious beliefs to which they appeal. In the modern era, this started with the Enlightenment, as skeptics challenged royal absolutism, based upon the role of God as King of Heaven, by questioning the existence of God. There was a significant atheist contingent within the proponents of the French Revolution.

Later, communists took up this kind of challenge to theism, with Karl Marx arguing that religion was the «opiate of the masses», used by clergy to hold workers in the trammels of the bourgeoisie. This sentiment emerges in this excerpt from the famous communist anthem, L’Internationale:

There are no supreme saviours
Neither God, nor Caesar, nor tribune.
Producers, let us save ourselves
Decree the common salvation.

Today, theist politicians use religion as a rhetorical tool to push various agendas that might otherwise come under closer scrutiny. For example, as the American evangelical-left figure Jim Wallis noted in his book God’s Politics, the Republican Party has made very successful use of religion, specifically concerning the abortion issue, to attract voters who would otherwise vote for the Democratic Party.

A consequence of the prevalence of such rhetorical devices is that a broad range of crank religious ideas, specifically creationism, gain credence when politicians use them to ensure the voting public of their religious bona fides. This, in turn, causes legitimate science to fall into some disrepute among the people, making it much easier for other kinds of pseudoscience, such as global warming denialism and scientific racism, to get a foot in the door.

In short, the presence of religion in politics can lead to a whole maelstrom of craziness, and some people might feel motivated to nip this in the bud by discrediting religion in general.

See also[edit]

  • Agnosticism
  • Antitheism
  • Apatheism
  • Atheism+
  • Atheist bus campaign
  • Atheophobia
  • Brights Movement
  • Deism
  • Ignosticism
  • Methodological naturalism
  • New Atheism
  • FAQ for the Newly Deconverted
  • Theism
  • Jean Meslier, a priest who wrote about being/becoming an atheist

Essays by RationalWikians[edit]

  • Atheism essays category

Want to read this in another language?[edit]

Русскоязычным вариантом данной статьи является статья Атеизм

External links[edit]

  • Atheism — BBC: Religion
  • Definition of «atheism» (and «atheist»)
  • Description of Atheism
  • American Atheists and The American Humanist Society debate the existence of God
  • Atheist Frontier — includes a wide range of useful resources
  • Atheist Scholar
  • Celebrity Atheist List — A wiki of contemporary and historical non-believers, with entries categorized as «The Atheist and the Materialist,» «The Agnostic» and «The Ambiguous»
  • Center for Atheist Research
  • Everyone’s «atheism» community on Google+
  • Investigating Atheism Project — University of Cambridge
  • Mom, Dad, I’m an Atheist… OH SNAP!
  • Pharyngula blogger, PZ Myers writes a gorgeous argument for the humanity of atheism
  • Some things about some other things — ScienceBlogs
  • The alt.atheism usenet (newsgroups) FAQ
  • The 50 Most Brilliant Atheists of All Time
  • 9 Great Freethinkers and Religious Dissenters in History

National atheism organizations[edit]

  • American Atheists
  • Atheist Ireland — Promoting atheism, reason, and an ethical, secular state
  • Canadian atheists — True, Northern, Strong, and Free

Notes[edit]

  1. With thanks to the Fantasy Name Generator.[4]
  2. Yes, that was a pun.Wikipedia You may groan now.
  3. Sadly, some people feel personally insulted and/or threatened by the very existence of atheists. If you happen to be an atheist in a country where atheists face discrimination, it might be wise not to draw attention to your non-belief.
  4. Although some noncognitivists would claim the argument disproves atheism as well because it also makes a truth-claim about nonsensical statements, which cannot be true or false by definition.
  5. It can be argued that this phenomenon points not to anything being wrong with religion per se, but rather with immoral humans twisting religion into a bastardized form that they can use for their own wicked purposes. The crux of this argument is that religion is simply a social institution that is functionally a tool for society to use to function and survive, with its intended uses including encouraging communal harmony, altruism, and adherence to norms and moral codes. However, like any tool, while it was developed with good intentions, ultimately, whether religion is a boon or a bane depends on the character of the individual using it. It should be noted that this argument implicitly admits that religion is not always effective at meeting one of its purposes — that being to curtail the selfishness and irresponsibility that plague human nature — which opens the possibility of other philosophies, such as secular humanism, potentially being better-suited for preventing people from harassing, maiming, and killing each other for petty gains or sadistic pleasure. However, this in itself begs the realization that religion at least helps some people to get along with their conspecifics and conduct their lives in a righteous fashion… which begs the question of how righteous these people really are if religion is the only thing that stops them from behaving like psychopaths… which begs the response that at least they have something holding their harmful and antisocial impulses in check… and this note is already getting extremely long, so this is as good a place as any to stop.
  6. Indeed, fundamentalists behaving like assholes is one of the biggest factors that turns people away from religion.
  7. The fact that this censorship of education is an implicit admission that only a miseducated imbecile would subscribe to fundamentalism is lost on fundies.
  8. Yes, atheists can commit logical fallacies, too.
  9. It is actually the symbol used by American Atheists. The symbol was allegedly created at the founding of American Atheists in 1963… Looks more like the logo for the «Annapolis Nukes» triple-A baseball team.
  10. This quotation serves as the dedication in Dawkins’ The God Delusion.
  11. Who was a lifelong Roman Catholic and invoked religion and God quite often in his rhetoric.
  12. Who was thrown out of the orthodox seminary for stealing and giving the proceeds to the Communist party and later used the Orthodox church for political gain during the war, though he likely was an atheist, if anybody who believes himself to be godlike can called any such thing.
  13. Richard Dawkins, an early chapter in The Blind Watchmaker[41]
  14. Stalin is a good example: he rejected Darwinian evolution, promoting Lysenkoism instead, and consistently purged evolutionary biologists in favor of Lysenkoists.
  15. British law has come close to finding this in employment discrimination cases.
  16. Moral relativism has to be invoked here because — contrary to what many religious people would like to believe — morality tends to change over time and generations. It’s entirely possible (and even likely) that Yawheh as the Bible describes him would legitimately have been considered noble and benevolent by the standards of the Bible’s authors, and only looks like an evil prick to modern atheists because morality, society, and technology have evolved to the point where things like slavery, genocide, and homophobia are seen as unforgivable atrocities rather than necessary survival strategies.
  17. Antelope Valley Freethinkers funded scholarships for young freethinkers. The Antelope Valley Union High School District refused to publish details about those scholarships while religious scholarships were published. After a successful lawsuit brought by the Freedom from Religion Foundation, the freethinkers’ scholarship will be published with the others.[46]
  18. Although later in his life, he took the Pascal’s wager. Well, he was a game theorist after all.
  19. Indeed, some Christian denominations, like Roman Catholicism, actively discourage Biblical literalism.
  20. Okay, maybe not Maryland, but you get the point.
  21. It did take a lot of blood and tears for it to get there, though.

References[edit]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Atheism by Kai E. Nielsen, Encyclopædia Britannica.
  2. See God Checker for a humorous list of many of these gods.
  3. Richard Dawkins on militant atheism, February 2002
  4. Fantasy Name Generator
  5. Hitchens’s razor, Wikiquote
  6. strongatheism.net
  7. Logical Arguments for Atheism The Secular Web.
  8. Evidential Arguments for Atheism The Secular Web
  9. 9.0 9.1 Major Threat to Religion? Clergy People Coming Out as Atheists by Greta Christina (June 11, 2012) AlterNet.
  10. Dutch rethink Christianity for a doubtful world by Robert Pigott (5 August 2011) BBC.
  11. Groups support pastors, priests leaving the pulpit (October 14, 2011) Freedom from Religion Foundation (archived from 7 Jul 2013 12:55:04 UTC).
  12. The Clergy Project: Do Atheist Clergy Change The Religion Game? by Greta Christina (June 20, 2012) The Orbit.
  13. Religious Views and Beliefs Vary Greatly by Country, According to the Latest Financial Times/Harris Poll (December 20, 2006) Harris Interactive (archived from January 9, 2007).
  14. Few ‘No Religion’ Americans Are Atheists» by Dan Gilgoff (September 28, 2009) US News & World Report (archived from 7 Jul 2013 12:55:46 UTC).
  15. U.S. Religious Landscape Survey. Report 1: Religious Affiliation The Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. «1.6% are atheists» (archived from February 2, 2011).
  16. How religious are British people?
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 Global Index of Religiosity and Atheism by Ijaz Shafi Gilani, Rushna Shahid & Irene Zuettel (2012) WIN-Gallup International via Scribd.
  18. Liberalism, atheism, male sexual exclusivity linked to IQ by Elizabeth Landau (Feb. 26, 2010) CNN Health. «…people who identified as liberal and atheist had higher IQs…».
  19. «Would you believe it?» by Paul Bell. «Would you believe it?» (Feb. 2002) Mensa Magazine, UK Edition, pp. 12–13.
  20. Liberals and atheists smarter? Intelligent people have values novel in human evolutionary history, study finds (February 24, 2010) Science Daily.
  21. Why Liberals and Atheists Are More Intelligent by Satoshi Kanazawa (2010) Social Psychology Quarterly 73(1): 33-57. https://doi.org/10.1177/0190272510361602.
  22. Correspondence: Leading scientists still reject god. by Edward J. Larson & Larry Witham (1998) Nature 394(6691): 313 (via Scribd).
  23. Less than half of passing IIT batch believes in God’s existence by Yogita Rao (Apr 15, 2015, 12:52 IST) The Times of India.
  24. There are more atheists and agnostics entering Harvard than Protestants and Catholics by Sarah Pulliam Bailey (September 9, 2015 at 5:56 a.m. PDT) The Washington Post.
  25. Beliefs and Lifestyle by David Freed & Idrees Kahloon, The Harvard Crimson.
  26. Religion and Education Around the World (December 13, 2016) Pew Research Center
  27. Da Silva, Sergio; Matsushita, Raul; Seifert, Guilherme; De Carvalho, Mateus. «Atheists score higher on cognitive reflection tests». MPRA Paper (68451).
  28. A True Wake-up Call for Arne Duncan: The Real Reason Behind Chinese Students Top PISA Performance by Yong Zhao (10 December 2010).
  29. Do Religious Physicians Disproportionately Care for the Underserved? by Farr A. Curlin et al. (2007) Annals of Family Medicine 5:353-360. doi:10.1370/afm.677.
  30. America’s Changing Religious Landscape: Christians Decline Sharply as Share of Population; Unaffiliated and other Faiths Continue to Grow (May 12, 2015)
  31. 31.0 31.1 Hitchens, Dawkins and Harris Are Old News: A Totally Different Atheism Is on the Rise by Chris Hall (June 4, 2014) AlterNet.
  32. 32.0 32.1 The Unbelievers by Emily Brennan (November 25, 2011) The New York Times.
  33. Atheism has a big race problem that no one’s talking about by Sikivu Hutchinson (June 16, 2014 at 2:29 p.m. PDT) The Washington Post.
  34. The growth of African-American atheism: Christianity remains central to life in the Southern United States. But with non-belief growing, secular organisations are finding new ways of supporting those who are breaking with their faith. by Dale DeBakcsy (5th August 2014) New Humanist.
  35. Wikipedia diff, 31st August 2009
  36. Carvaka Humanistic Texts.
  37. Atheists As «Other»: Moral Boundaries and Cultural Membership in American Society by Penny Edgell, Joseph Gerteis & Douglas Hartmann (2006) American Sociological Review 71:211. doi:1177/000312240607100203.
  38. The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins (2006) Bantam Press. ISBN 0593055489.
  39. The 2011 American Values Survey Public Religion Research Institute.
  40. Would You Be Comfortable with an Atheist President? 2011 Survey Says… by Hemant Mehta (November 9, 2011) Friendly Atheist.
  41. The Blind Watchmaker by Richard Dawkins (1985) Longman Scientific and Technical. ISBN 0582446945.
  42. Top Ten Creationist Arguments by TheThinkingAtheist (Dec 30, 2009) YouTube (archived copy).
  43. What happens at an atheist church? by Brian Wheeler (4 February 2013) BBC.
  44. ‘Not believing in God makes life more precious’: Meet the atheist ‘churchgoers’. Queen and Stevie Wonder instead of hymns; a science lecture instead of a sermon. Can church work without belief in God? Esther Addley joins 300 people who say it can by Esther Addley (3 Feb 2013 13.44 EST) The Guardian.
  45. Leaving Las Vegas … Rich by Michael Shermer (Jul 17 2012) ‘»Skeptic Blog.
  46. CA School District Owes Atheist Groups $10,000 After Censoring Their Scholarship Offers by Hemant Mehta (June 17, 2016
    ) Friendly Atheist.
  47. Atheist Group Continues to Help Community Clean Up Its Riverbed by Richard Wade (September 21, 2015) Friendly Atheist.
  48. Hey Christians. Don’t be evil! by Valerie Tarico (July 17, 2014).
  49. Are Religious People More Moral than Atheists? by Robert N. McCauley (Mar 22, 2012) Psychology Today
  50. Ten Common Myths About Atheists by Lee Myers, Atheist Republic.
  51. name=»LCN»Letter to a Christian Nation by Sam Harris (2006) Knopf. ISBN 0307278778.
  52. Out Campaign
  53. Beyond the Crusades: Christianity’s Lies, Laws and Legacy by Michael Paulkovich (2016)American Atheist Press. 3rd ed. ISBN 1578840376. p. 9.
  54. Current Controversies: ‘New Atheism’ (2008) Investigating Atheism (archived from July 3, 2008).
  55. How to Shut Up an Atheist if You Must by Doug Giles (Oct 20, 2007 5:23 PM) Townhall.
  56. Atheism and the «shut up, that’s why» argument by Greta Christina (February 2009).
  57. It’s Dangerous for Children To Know Atheism Exists, Says Illinois State Legislator (April 4, 2008) Friendly Atheist.
  58. Non-religious suffer discrimination or persecution in most countries of the world, new report finds (10 Dec 2013) National Secular Society.
  59. Atheists around world suffer persecution, discrimination: report by Robert Evans (December 9, 2012 / 4:12 PM) Reuters.
  60. How the right to deny the existence of God is under threat globally: New report also criticises Scotland’s religious representatives on education boards by Adam Sherwin (10 December 2014 00:57) Independent.
  61. Support a Cause that makes a Difference Secular Rescue, a program of the Center for Inquiry.
  62. George H.W. Bush and the Atheists (11 July 2007, at 11:20) Source Watch, the Center for Media and Democracy.
  63. Atheists As «Other»: Moral Boundaries and Cultural Membership in American Society by Penny Edgell, Joseph Gerteis & Douglas Hartmann (2006) American Sociological Review 71:211-234.
  64. Atheists, Muslims See Most Bias as Presidential Candidates: Two-thirds would vote for gay or lesbian by Jeffrey M. Jones (June 21, 2012) Gallup.
  65. In U.S., Socialist Presidential Candidates Least Appealing by Justin McCarthy (June 22, 2015) Gallup.
  66. The stigma of being an atheist in the US by Aleem Maqbool (4 August 2014) BBC.
  67. U.S. Religious Knowledge Survey: Who Knows What About Religion (September 28, 2010) Pew Forum.
  68. In Atheists We Distrust: Subjects believe that people behave better when they think that God is watching over them by Daisy Grewal (January 17, 2012) Scientific American.
  69. Atheists distrusted as much as rapists by Kimberly Winston (12/10/2011 4:42 AM) USA Today.
  70. Unfavorable Views of Jews and Muslims on the Increase In Europe (September 17, 2008) Pew Research Center.
  71. If I am Elected President by Chuck Norris (06/11/2007 at 1:00 AM) WND (archived from June 14, 2012).
  72. Can George Bush, with impunity, state that atheists should not be considered either citizens or patriots? by Madalyn O’Hair, Postiiveatheism, reprinted from American Atheists (archived from December 3, 2003).
  73. Should Evolutionists Be Allowed to Vote? by Tom Willis (2008) CSA News 25(4):1 (archived from January 17, 2009).
  74. Arkansas, 5 Other States, Ban Atheists from Public Service. Seriously: There’s a special place in heaven for atheists who endure this nonsense. by Bonnie Erbe (17 February 2009) U.S. News & World Report.
  75. United States Supreme Court: Torcaso v. Watkins (1961), No. 373. Argued: April 24, 1961Decided: June 19, 1961 FindLaw.
  76. Atheist Revival in Arkansas by David Waters (February 13, 2009 1:53 PM) The Washington Post/Newsweek (archived from February 18, 2009).
  77. See for instance Zuckerman, Phil (2008), Society without God: What the Least Religious Nations Can Tell Us about Contentment. New York: New York University Press. A sneak peek can be found in the New York Times review of the book.
  78. BBC News — Blending politics and religion
  79. The Muslim Britons who are persecuted for being atheists
  80. Poland, Bastion of Religion, Sees Rise in Secularism

Atheistic religions do not believe in a creator deity. And some of them stay clear of the supernatural altogether, focusing on how to live a good life in the here and now.

Most of the religions described below are quite old. So they have changed and adapted throughout the millennia and, like Christianity, now have different branches. Some branches have added deities to the mix. But others keep their religions as they were at the beginning: atheistic.

Buddhism

Vietnamese nun in purple robes. She smiles while she holds her hands in prayer.

Buddhism is a path of self-development. The adept learns to calm the mind to see the world with clarity. (Photo: Donavanik/CCBYSA4.0)

The goal of Buddhism is to find lasting, unconditional happiness.

To do that, Buddhists believe, one has to be able to see the world with clarity and detachment. Those are acquired through a set of practices. There are no gods or spirits to invoke for help. Buddhism is a path of self-development. And it requires practitioners to take responsibility for themselves.

A person who has achieved the goal is said to have achieved Nirvana, Buddhahood, or Liberation. Such a person is no longer swayed by what happens in the world, for they have found their center.

Buddha

Buddha was the founder of this atheistic religion. And he was adamant that no one should follow his teachings blindly. Each person has to choose the practices that make sense to -and work for- them. And when they outgrow a particular teaching, they should discard it, as one discards a boat after crossing the river, to paraphrase him.

Buddha, real name Siddhartha Gautama, is not seen as a god. He is a human that found Liberation through practice. Anyone can follow his path and become an enlightened being, aka a Buddha.

Buddhism has some 500 million adepts. It is widely practiced in Asia, especially in India, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Tibet, China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Korea, and Japan. (To read some quotes by Buddha, go here.)

Jainism

Interior of a temple filled with delicately carved white columns. Two women in red saris stand in the center.

Interior of Jain Adinath Temple, Ranakpur, India. Jainism teaches how to purify one’s soul. (Photo: Gerd Eichmann/CCBYSA4.0)

For Jains, the aim in life is to purify the soul. They must clean it from all karma (past actions). And that is done through penance, meditation, right-thinking, and other practices.

One of the fundamentals of this atheistic religion is not harming any beings. So Jains are vegetarians. And some even cover their mouths with a cloth all day so they will not accidentally swallow an insect. And they are very careful when walking, to avoid stepping on crawlers.

For Jains, the universe has always existed and will always exist. Much like modern scientists, they believe nothing is destroyed or created. Instead, everything is constantly changing. They think the universe was not created by a god. And that there are no gods that demand worship or that take an interest in human matters.

Every person must strive to gain their own enlightenment. A task that requires many reincarnations.

Humans live in the middle world

Souls can reincarnate in different spheres, some higher, some lower. Humans, for example, are born in the middle world. Through purifying practices, they can reincarnate in the heavenly spheres. And through lack of effort, they can be reborn in the hellish spheres.

The beings in the heavenly spheres are not creator divinities. They, simply, are purified souls, an end product of humanity. Those heavenly beings may be worshiped if desired. The point of the worship being that the adept focuses on the good qualities of those souls. And by doing so, they may bring forth those virtues into their own lives.

Jainism started in India. It has no known founder and was already around 2,700 years ago. Today, it has 4 million adepts, most of whom live in India.

Confucianism

Atheistic religions. Traditional Chinese building. With a garden in front.

Confucius’ Temple of Beijing, China. Confucianism focuses on being one’s best self, in order to live in harmony with society. (Photo: xiquinhosilva/CCBY2.0)

Confucianism teaches how to live a good life. It focuses on creating a harmonious society. But it starts with the individual. An evolved, well-behaved person influences their family. That evolved family, in turn, influences their community. And the community influences society as a whole -including the government.

The virtues

Confucius (551-479 BC) believed some men were better than others. But all men, he thought, were born equal, and it was through self-discipline that some became morally superior.

He expected teachers and rulers, especially, to reign themselves in and work on becoming virtuous. That way, they could use their power beneficially while setting a good example.

Some Confucianist virtues are consideration, kindness, love, harmony, righteousness, trustworthiness, and a distaste for excess.

Confucius, who was Chinese, was an admirer of his culture. So he included some ancient Chinese traditions in his doctrine. For example, the observance of traditional rituals and the long-standing ancestor worship.

Both practices require time and dedication, thus polishing the practitioner’s patience. As an extra benefit, they promote a sense of community among the participants. Which Confucius approved of since one of his goals was to create a strong society.

Confucius and Heaven

Confucius avoided the subject of gods altogether. When asked about metaphysical subjects, the Chinese master would reply: “We do not yet know how to serve man. How can we know about serving the spirits?”

After his death, temples were built in his honor. But he is not worshiped as a god; rather, he is admired as a teacher. His followers collected his saying in The Analects, which eventually became a sacred book.

His doctrine centers on how to behave oneself in order to be in harmony with “Tian.” A word that theists (those who believe in God) interpret as “Heaven,” aka “the will of God.” While atheists read as “Sky,” meaning “the laws of nature.” All in all, God worship is not a part of Confucianism. And many of its 6 to 10 million adepts are atheists.

A point of contention is whether Confucianism is even a religion. Some consider it a way of life or a philosophy, but it does fulfill the broader definition of religion.

Non-theist Quakers

An auditorium full of people.

Quaker congregation in York, England. Non-theists Quakers aim to live an ethical life. (Photo: Paul Carpenter/CCBY1.0)

The non-theist are a group within the Quaker community.

Traditional Quakers believe in having direct contact with God, that God is in everybody and, therefore, everybody is sacred. They believe in social justice, egalitarianism, and living an ethical life for the good of the community and the world.

Quakers split from the Church of England in the 17th century (in not-so-good terms).

Now, non-theist Quakers are a group that formed within the Quaker community of California in 1939.

The non-theists uphold the same values of their Quaker siblings, minus the God parts. So while they do not believe in a god, and do not believe God is in everyone, they do respect the dignity of every human life. And they do believe in social justice and all the rest.

For them, living an ethical life means speaking and acting with integrity. It means creating peace within themselves so they can live in peace with others. And they favor a lifestyle of simplicity, among other virtues.

Two of the pillars of Quakerism are tolerance and community. Thus, all Quakers, theists and non-theists, can worship together (for them, worship means sharing their thoughts in church).

There are some 380,000 Quakers in the world. How many are non-theists is unknown. Most Quakers live in Kenya (146,300), the United States (87,000), Burundi (35,000), Bolivia (22,300), Guatemala (20,000), and the United Kingdom (15,000).

More Articles

When I look back on my pre-Christian days, I realize it wasn’t so much that I was an atheist as I was more just apathetic. I guess I was an apatheist. I didn’t believe in God, but mostly I didn’t care. Believing in God was irrelevant to me.

Today, why people don’t believe in God is extremely important to me. I have dedicated my life to reaching people who are far from having faith in God. To help them believe, it helps to understand why they don’t believe.

It’s an important question for all of us. God has given Christians the mission of leading people to faith and, in America, our mission field keeps getting bigger.

Why Do People Not Believe In God?

Well, lots of reasons. Here are some:

1. Thinking There is no Evidence for God

Many people who do not believe in God think there is no evidence for God’s existence. They believe believing in God is a nice thought, but ultimately is not the main reason for living.

2. Growing up in a Faithless Family

In one study, 32% of atheists said they grew up in a home with parents who didn’t believe in God. It can be difficult to break out of the mindset that became engrained early in life.

3. Stopped Believing in Religious Teachings

On the other hand, over 60% of atheists were raised in church-going homes but, at some point, lost their faith. Why? I suspect they were never told why we believe, but only told to believe. They weren’t led to make their faith their own.

4. Experiences at College

People who lose their faith often do so in college. Why? It could be from exposure to people who believe other things or a professor who attacked faith in God, and this person who grew up in the church can be left confused and wondering if they were silly for ever believing.

5. Intellectual Challenges

Intellectual questions about faith often start between the high school and college years and can continue indefinitely. When faced with unanswerable questions, a person can assume the faith they believe in is inadequate or irrelevant.

Some questions have sound intellectual answers, but a person who can’t find those answers can easily turn away from their faith. Examples of these questions may be:

  • “If God is loving, why is there so much evil in the world?”
  • “If God created the world in six days, what about evolution and dinosaurs?”
  • “Why would a good God send people to hell?”

6. Emotional challenges

I’ve found that a lack of faith in God often traces back to emotional challenges more so than intellectual reasons. Why do people lose their faith? Some turn because God didn’t answer an important prayer or rescue them from the consequences of a bad decision. They may have been hurt by a church or turned off by hypocritical Christians. One study found that many of the most well-known atheists grew up without a father. It can be challenging to believe in a good and loving heavenly Father when you’ve had unpleasant experiences or maybe the absence of a father.

7. Wanting Moral Independence

I’ve had several unbelieving friends who were willing to discuss God and listen to evidence. Over time, I was able to help reveal God. They admitted they couldn’t rationally deny the existence of God or that Jesus truly was his Son come to earth to save us. They remained atheists who would not accept Jesus as their Savior. Why? Sadly, they didn’t want to bend their knee to God and give him moral authority in their lives. They wanted to keep doing what they were doing without God interfering. That’s why it’s so important to talk about the topic of Jesus.

8. Issues about sex

Surveys tell us that of people who have walked away from the church and their faith: 19% said sexual abuse acts committed by clergy were a significant reason why. For those raised Catholic, the number was 32%. Even more prevalent, 29% (and 39% of those raised Catholic) said they left the church because of negative teachings and treatment of gay and lesbian people. It’s something for us to think about: Many don’t want to become Christians because they want to be loving people, and believe Christians are too mean and judgmental.

9. Politics

For years, cynical people have rejected church because of a belief that Christians are too into politics. In the last year that issue has become exponentially worse. Not only are people staying away from the church because of politics, but they’re also now leaving a church because of politics. In fact, it’s believed that 14% of American Christians left their churches as a result of the 2016 elections. Many feel that Christians have prioritized political issues over character because their support of politicians is viewed as immoral. This has created a crisis of faith for many and gives another reason for those already outside the faith to have no interest in coming in.

What can we do to be more effective in our mission of leading these people to faith? Lots of things and they’ve been right there in the Bible; we just have to live by them:

  • Titus 2:10 – “in every way … make the teaching about God our Savior attractive.”
  • 1 Peter 3:15-16 – “But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord. Always be prepared to answer everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have. But do this with gentleness and respect, keeping a clear conscience, so that those who speak maliciously against your good behavior in Christ may be ashamed of their slander.”
  • John 13:35 – “By this everyone will know that you are my disciples if you love one another.”
  • 1 Corinthians 9:22 – “I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.”
  • Colossians 4:6 – “Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.”

What Does the Bible Say About Not Believing in God?

In John 3:16 the Bible says, “For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.” The Bible says the only way to receive the gift of eternal life is through believing in God’s son, Jesus. If someone does not believe in God, they will not receive the free gift of eternal life.

As Christians, it is our duty to live life in the way God has called us to in order to tell the world about Him and His son. If we live the way God’s called us to live, we might be able to help more people believe in God.

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Examples of using
Not believing in god
in a sentence and their translations

My question is that one may think that they are not believing in God, but yet have personality traits that are loving.

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Мой вопрос

в

том, что можно подумать, что они не верят в Бога, но все же имеют черты характера, которые являются любящими.

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Posted by1 year ago

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Take My Energy

I was raised in a Christian household, and I have dabbled with Atheism in the past, but right before the pandemic, I had rekindled my faith. But as soon as COVID happened, I believed that God was punishing me in some way, and still is. I’ve had a looming sense that God wants me to suffer and that it’s my only purpose in his divine plan. Recently I’ve been watching George Carlin again, and he has convinced me that there probably isn’t a God, but I still have this idea that he exists, and that he’s purposely torturing me, and I don’t know how to get over it. does anybody have any advice on how to break this feeling/belief?

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