Re: No problem believing both studies cited in this thread
by
Neuro
07/23/2008, 1:49 PM #
Mr. Doering,
First, without knowing the actual questions asked, which I did not bother to look up, I do not know how precisely I would respond.
Second, I'm saying that I do indeed have a personal belief in God but that I harbor doubts to his existance. A previous poster in this thread said that 'knowledge = justified true belief". If I had proof that God existed then I would have knowledge of His existance and would not need to believe, nor to doubt. But I do not have proof of God's existance and so I am left with only my beliefs and my doubts.
Because of those doubts, based on the phrasing in the article ("58% of 1,000 randomly selected US scientists expressed disbelief or doubt in the existence of God,"), I would of course put myself in the 'Doubt or Agnosticism' category.
None-the-less, I see no need for the categories suggested by Lueba to be mutually exclusive. I also doubt I am the only one who thinks there may be some overlap: the percentages in both the 1914 and 1998 study fail to add up to 100%.
Oddly, this failing does not appear in the results from 1933, suggesting that either the instructions or the questions themselves were not held constant across time. This could be very problematic; as I'm sure you know, how you ask a question can cause the answer to change dramatically.