Godless liberals & religious conservatives, the numbers recapped

I’ve presented this data before, but I thought a review would be nice to get into the record. AllahPundit and Ace have both linked to Heather’s post on David Brooks & the New Atheist. Ace notes:

This gets at something I think is important: I believe that evangelical atheists like Bill Maher are more obsessed with religion than the Pope because they believe that if people simply reject God, they’ll automatically agree with Maher’s libertine liberal take on the world.

They won’t. Religion is often associated with traditional values, but it is not always the cause of them. There is a religious left which, I’m sure, is quite serious about its religious beliefs, and yet champions a liberal values system more in line with Bill Maher’s preferred politics.

On the other hand there are atheists like Allah and agnostics like myself who nevertheless are mostly traditionalists. Despite Bill Maher’s desperate belief, a lack of affirmative faith in God has not made us good little liberals.

Below the fold I’ve reproduced the GSS data comparing belief in God & political orientation. The red shading indicates overrepresentation in a cell, while the blue the inverse. As you can see, the more secular you are the more liberal you are, but most secular people are not liberal. Similarly, liberals tend to be more secular, but most liberals are not secular.

Frequency Distribution
Cells contain:
-Column percent
-Weighted N
GOD

ATH.

AGN.

HIGHER POWER

SOMETIMES

DOUBTS

GOD EXISTS

TOTAL
POL. VERY LIB. 8.7
27
5.8
31
5.0
57
3.0
16
2.0
43
2.1
171
2.7
345
LIBERAL 27.8
87
19.6
106
20.1
227
15.1
80
13.2
277
8.6
681
11.6
1,457
SLIGHT LIB. 10.5
33
20.6
111
18.6
210
10.1
53
15.3
322
10.5
836
12.4
1,566
MOD. 31.0
97
31.6
171
34.1
386
42.2
223
38.0
797
38.8
3,092
37.9
4,766
SLGHT CONS 9.1
29
12.8
69
13.2
149
16.9
90
18.6
390
15.8
1,262
15.8
1,988
CONS. 10.2
32
7.8
42
6.9
78
11.7
62
10.9
229
19.8
1,578
16.1
2,020
VERY CONS 2.7
8
1.8
10
2.3
25
1.0
5
2.0
43
4.3
345
3.5
436
TOTAL 100.0
312
100.0
540
100.0
1,132
100.0
529
100.0
2,100
100.0
7,965
100.0
12,579

Frequency Distribution
Cells contain:
-Column percent
-Weighted N
POLVIEWS
VERY LIB. LIB. SLIGHT LIB. MOD. SLGHT CONS.. CONS. VERY CONS.
TOTAL
GOD ATHEIST 7.9
27
6.0
87
2.1
33
2.0
97
1.4
29
1.6
32
1.9
8
2.5
312
AGNOSTIC 9.1
31
7.3
106
7.1
111
3.6
171
3.5
69
2.1
42
2.3
10
4.3
540
HIGHER POWER 16.5
57
15.6
227
13.4
210
8.1
386
7.5
149
3.8
78
5.8
25
9.0
1,132
BELIEVE SOMETIMES 4.6
16
5.5
80
3.4
53
4.7
223
4.5
90
3.1
62
1.2
5
4.2
529
BELIEVE BUT DOUBTS 12.4
43
19.0
277
20.6
322
16.7
797
19.6
390
11.4
229
9.8
43
16.7
2,100
KNOW GOD EXISTS 49.6
171
46.7
681
53.4
836
64.9
3,092
63.5
1,262
78.1
1,578
78.9
345
63.3
7,965
COL TOTAL 100.0
345
100.0
1,457
100.0
1,566
100.0
4,766
100.0
1,988
100.0
2,020
100.0
436
100.0
12,579
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6 Responses to Godless liberals & religious conservatives, the numbers recapped

  1. UNRR says:

    This post has been linked for the HOT5 Daily 4/9/2009, at The Unreligious Right

  2. Chris says:

    Where do libertarians tend to put themselves on a liberal…conservative scale, when they get done railing against the inadequacy of one-dimensional political models?

  3. Joshua says:

    The religious/secular divide might not exactly track the red/blue divide in this country, but as has already been discussed here before, religious and secular-minded people do have quite different sets of motivations.

    Simply put (maybe a bit too simply, in fact), while religious people on the whole are probably no more and no less capable of reasoning, or of listening to reason, than secular people, religious people have one other factor to consider on any given issue or situation that secular ones don’t: Which choice is most likely to please God, and thereby get me and the people I care about into heaven? The answer to that question is, of course, a function of one’s understanding of what God wants, which in turn is a function of one’s specific religious beliefs. That explains why the right doesn’t have a monopoly on the religious.

    Beliefs do matter, particularly for the incentives they create among their believers.

  4. Kevembuangga says:

    while religious people on the whole are probably no more and no less capable of reasoning, or of listening to reason, than secular people,

    C’mon, ANY religious belief is bound to conflict one way or another with plain everyday evidence, this sends religious people into a tail-spin of demented pseudo-logical contrived arguments, this is NOT “listening to reason”.
    And yes, alas, “Beliefs do matter”, this could be the right explanation for the Fermi Paradox, every “civilised” sentient life turn nuts and crushes the rational minority within.

  5. Joshua says:

    K’buangaa: C’mon, ANY religious belief is bound to conflict one way or another with plain everyday evidence, this sends religious people into a tail-spin of demented pseudo-logical contrived arguments, this is NOT “listening to reason”.

    You missed my point. I said religious people were capable of listening to reason, not that they actually did. That’s where incentives and the motivational factor come in. Religion ups the ante, quite literally to infinity. Your brain may be telling you X, but if you also believe God says Y, and that your eternal salvation is riding on your acceptance of God’s answer above all others, then Y becomes, well, a no-brainer.

  6. Gary McGath says:

    On any poll which asks me to rank myself on a liberal-to-conservative scale, I refuse to participate. That’s like asking me to rank myself on a Croatian-speaking to Serbian-speaking scale.

Comments are closed.