Wednesday, December 14, 2005

Gallup: Poll Finds Americans' Belief in God Remains Strong

A new Gallup survey released today finds that four decades after the "God Is Dead" controversy was first noted, Americans retain a strong belief in a higher power. Some 94% think God exists.

Only 5% feel God "does not exist" -- and even most of them "are not sure" of that. Exactly 1% are certain there is no God.

5 comments:

JohnFen said...

Hmmm, I wonder how they phrased the question? If it was a straight "do you believe in God" then the poll is worthless, since what "God" means is a highly personal thing.

Even athiests often concede, under social pressure, that a "higher power" exists, rationalizing that the higher power could be entirely composed of impersonal forces. This is a very different "god" than what Falwell would describe.

This is one of my pet peeve questions, along with others along the same liens such as "do you believe in the soul?". My answer is always "it depends." The problem is that to properly and completely answer the question involves a great deal of semantic negotiation to make sure everyone means the same thing.

Mac said...

My answer to the "God question" generally goes something like "Please define 'God.'"

Mac said...

I'm not asking for a *precise* definition, mind you. Asking for someone's definition of God is basically just a way of determining whether one's perception of "God" is of the old-man-in-the-sky variety or of a more nebulous (and more interesting, to me) sort.

Personally, I think there could very well be some sort of "higher power," although I'd be most surprised to discover it's anthropomorphic. I'm guessing we don't even have a vocabulary with which to properly describe it.

Anonymous said...

A vastly intelligent being responsible for creating the known universe.

From what Ive read of the latest brand of string theory (in the mags they print for rubes like me) it should be possible to create your own universe. If you have enough energy and know how you should be able to build your own universe, built to your own specs.

Why couldnt 'God' just be a incredibly tech advanced being playing around with his pocket universe? Any sufficiently advanced tech is no different from magic and all that. I like this idea most because it pisses off both the priest and the athiest while at the same time working within their dogma. A compassionate yet judgemental creator being that works within logic and science.

There was a short novel called Calculating God. In it a collection of alien races about a hundred or two in advance of us makes contact. The twist is that their scientific outlook not only makes room for God but says that science and faith are naturally in harmony.

The protagonist is an athiest. He and his new alien companion have an ongoing debate about the whole thing. Not fundie at all, in fact the only real bad guys in it are ignorant bible thumping hillbillies that attack the museum that the protag works in. Good little read.

Remember, the solution that ticks the most people off is often the right one.

Mac said...

I really, really enjoyed "Calculating God." Robert J. Sawyer is a good writer.