Others please feel free to add information as you see fit.
Of course, the first and most obvious to point out is the host of this site, Rich Deem. Other OEC sites exist too which Rich has referenced on his main page at http://www.godandscience.org
This may be interest to many.
James H. Leuba did a survey of a statistically significant sector of the scientific community in 1914 and 1933. The results of teh 1914 survey were published in The Belief in God and Immortality: A Psychological, Anthropological and Statistical Study (Boston:Sherman, French, 1916), 224-25. The surveys were repeated by others in 1996 and 1998.
Here's what the results show.
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m ... i_19332942
So, over the last 80 years, the composition of belief, unbelief and agnosticism within the scientific community has remained pretty much constant, but also the percentage of disbelief is higher than the general population. Whether thats a direct correlation or causation relationship is open to debate, as the same may be true of other fields of study, but it is something to consider and look at.New study reveals the percentage of scientists who believe in God is the same as 1916 count
Jet, April 21, 1997
The same percentage of scientists believe in God today as did some 81 years ago, a new study shows.
The new study conducted by noted historian Edward J. Larson of the University of Georgia in Athens asked 1,000 scientists including biologists, physicists and mathematicians, if they believed in God.
Some 40 percent of the scientists said they do believe in God. The number is the same percentage found in the famous 1916 survey conducted by noted psychologist James Leuba.
Leuba thought belief in God would drop among scientists as education improved, but he didn't have any polling evidence to support that claim, said Larson.
That's why Larson took another look at it in the new study, which is designed to reproduce the 1916 project. The new results are published in the journal, Nature.
Larson's survey followed the same procedure as the 1916 study. Like Leuba, he drew 1,000 names randomly from a reference book of American scientists, choosing biologists for half of his sample and splitting the remainder among mathematicians and physicists or astronomers.
The recent survey also excluded other scientists like ecologists and geologists.
Both surveys give a strict definition of God as one who communicates with mankind and is the one who people can pray to "in expectation of receiving an answer."
About 15 percent of the scientists polled in the 1916 study and the current survey said they were agnostic or had "no definite belief."
I would argue that part of the cause for this can be attributed in part to the a significant segment of the religious community defining belief in a way that precludes science period and when unbelievers see things defined in that manner it can tend to drive them away. Obviously though, that is not the only way to look at it.
Another article shows that there is a shift in terms of the distribution of such unbelief among the disciplines. In 1916 Biologists were the least believing. In 1996 that was held by Physicists and astronomers. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m ... i_20121068
Thoughts or comments?