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Do you believe in atheists? Trust and anti-atheist prejudiceGervais, Will Martin 11 1900 (has links)
Recent polls (e.g., Edgell, Gerteis & Hartmann, 2006) have consistently found
that atheists are the least liked group in America today, a type of prejudice that has barely been researched. This anti-atheist prejudice is surprising because atheists do not constitute a cohesive, recognizable, or powerful group. To the degree that people feel that religion provides a unique and necessary source of morality, they may dislike atheists primarily because of moral distrust towards them. This suggests a distinct origin for anti-atheist prejudice that sets it apart from ethnic, racial, and gender prejudice. We explored this broad hypothesis in a series of three experiments. First, we find that on an implicit level anti-atheist prejudice is driven by distrust rather than a feeling of generalized unpleasantness towards atheists. Second, we find that discrimination against atheists is
limited to contexts requiring a high degree of trust. Finally, we find that anti-atheist
prejudice is malleable. These findings are discussed in terms of prominent evolutionary
theories of religion.
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Athéismes et athéistes au XVIe siècle en FranceBerriot, F. January 1900 (has links)
Th. : Lett. : Nice : 1976.
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The burden of proof between theism and atheismRickard, Gary K. January 1999 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.)--Denver Seminary, 1999. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves [97-100]).
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The burden of proof between theism and atheismRickard, Gary K. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Denver Seminary, 1999. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves [97-100]).
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Do you believe in atheists? Trust and anti-atheist prejudiceGervais, Will Martin 11 1900 (has links)
Recent polls (e.g., Edgell, Gerteis & Hartmann, 2006) have consistently found
that atheists are the least liked group in America today, a type of prejudice that has barely been researched. This anti-atheist prejudice is surprising because atheists do not constitute a cohesive, recognizable, or powerful group. To the degree that people feel that religion provides a unique and necessary source of morality, they may dislike atheists primarily because of moral distrust towards them. This suggests a distinct origin for anti-atheist prejudice that sets it apart from ethnic, racial, and gender prejudice. We explored this broad hypothesis in a series of three experiments. First, we find that on an implicit level anti-atheist prejudice is driven by distrust rather than a feeling of generalized unpleasantness towards atheists. Second, we find that discrimination against atheists is
limited to contexts requiring a high degree of trust. Finally, we find that anti-atheist
prejudice is malleable. These findings are discussed in terms of prominent evolutionary
theories of religion. / Arts, Faculty of / Psychology, Department of / Graduate
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Sensitivity to Potential Anti-Atheist Discrimination Events: Psychological Correlates and Relationship with Psychological Well-BeingBradley, David F. January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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The Process and Experience of Deciding to Live Openly Atheist in a Christian Family: A Qualitative StudyAlidoosti, Babak 26 January 2010 (has links)
Existing literature reveals that atheists are among the least accepted groups in America. This study examined the process atheists go through when disclosing their atheism to their religious family members. It is hoped that the information gained may benefit therapists who work with this population as they go through this potentially difficult time and adds to the currently insufficient body of research on atheism and atheists. Using the guided frameworks of grounded theory and social exchange and choice theory, a focus group was conducted with seven atheists and coded for themes. The data revealed the disclosure process as happening in three main stages which cover how the atheists arrived at the belief system, how it was disclosed and its reception, and how relationships have been impacted since the disclosure. The clinical implications of the findings and suggestions for future research are also discussed. / Master of Science
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A view of God to consider : critique of Richard Kearney’s anatheism / Marquard Dirk PienaarPienaar, Marquard Dirk January 2015 (has links)
The preface gives the background of the postmodern religious context within which a
“view of God to consider” has become problematic. The preface also gives the
methodology as well as the rationale for the study. The article examines the anatheistic
concept of God of the well-known philosopher of religion, Richard Kearney, in order to
answer the question whether Kearney’s concept of God is to be regarded in our postmetaphysical
age and why. Two books of Kearney are selected to analyse, namely The
God Who May Be: A Hermeneutics of Religion (2001) and Anatheism: Returning to God
after God (2011). The article indicates that the anatheistic God is not easy to identify
and that it mostly involves a risk or wager of hospitality to recognize this God who is
amongst other, “weak, functionalist, the other, the stranger and the incarnated kingdom
of peace and love”. It is argued that although this non-metaphysical anatheistic God has
some positive aspects (creativities, plurality, not militant or dogmatic), it remains difficult
to mull over (and accept) this view of God for various reasons (weakness, functionality,
unrecognizability). Kearney helps one however through his anatheistic concept of God
to think new about the possibilities to “return to God after God” in our post-metaphysical
age. / MPhil , North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
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A view of God to consider : critique of Richard Kearney’s anatheism / Marquard Dirk PienaarPienaar, Marquard Dirk January 2015 (has links)
The preface gives the background of the postmodern religious context within which a
“view of God to consider” has become problematic. The preface also gives the
methodology as well as the rationale for the study. The article examines the anatheistic
concept of God of the well-known philosopher of religion, Richard Kearney, in order to
answer the question whether Kearney’s concept of God is to be regarded in our postmetaphysical
age and why. Two books of Kearney are selected to analyse, namely The
God Who May Be: A Hermeneutics of Religion (2001) and Anatheism: Returning to God
after God (2011). The article indicates that the anatheistic God is not easy to identify
and that it mostly involves a risk or wager of hospitality to recognize this God who is
amongst other, “weak, functionalist, the other, the stranger and the incarnated kingdom
of peace and love”. It is argued that although this non-metaphysical anatheistic God has
some positive aspects (creativities, plurality, not militant or dogmatic), it remains difficult
to mull over (and accept) this view of God for various reasons (weakness, functionality,
unrecognizability). Kearney helps one however through his anatheistic concept of God
to think new about the possibilities to “return to God after God” in our post-metaphysical
age. / MPhil , North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2015
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A Content Analysis of the Representation of Atheism and Religion in Chinese News Media: 1978-2011Jun Lu (7042982) 14 August 2019 (has links)
This dissertation aims
to fill in the lacuna left by previous research of empirical and systematic
examination of atheism vis-à-vis religion in China. Moreover, I intend to
reckon with the puzzling discrepancy between high proportion of self-identified
atheists and high percentage of religious believers and practitioners among
mainland Chinese. Through quantitative content analysis of the representation
of atheism and religion in the official newspaper, the <i>People’s Daily</i>, and the commercialized newspaper, <i>Southern Weekend</i>, and comparing and
contrasting the representation of two particular religions, namely, Buddhism
and Christianity in the <i>People’s Daily</i>,
I demonstrate that as the tonal uses, interplay of secularization and
desecularization trends over time, and framing of religions effectuate the
configuration and reconfiguration of the relative meanings and locations of
atheism and religion in the symbolic realm of media representation in
reform-era China, the transfiguration reveals to the audience the discursive
instability and fluidity underlying the concepts of “atheism” and “religion.” I
argue that the Chinese party-state’s pragmatism and commercialized media’s
commitment to modern journalism are among the major enabling factors for the
discursive practices of the news media that we see. As atheism and religion are
both embraced and contested, albeit differentially, in symbolic representation
by the news media, it facilitates the Chinese’s self-identification as an
atheist and simultaneously believing/behaving as a religionist, in spite of the
apparent logical incongruity in the double-identity.
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