Karim, Moïse
[UCL]
Saroglou, Vassilis
[UCL]
Does agnosticism versus atheism reflect only epistemic or deeper personality and other individual differences? Following Karim and Saroglou (2023; Belgium), we investigated this question among 537 UK adults, self-identified as Christian, agnostic, or atheist. Agnostics were midway between religionists and atheists on prosocial dispositions (agreeableness, belief in world’s benevolence), outcomes of intuitive thinking (paranormal beliefs, religiosity), and non-theistic forms of spirituality; and showed greater openness to experience and weaker convictional self-identification than atheists. Personality uniquely, beyond religious socialization, predicted agnosticism versus atheism. Spirituality denoted, across all three groups, connectedness with the world, interest in the paranormal, and life satisfaction; among nonbelievers, personal belief in a just-world; and prosocial dispositions and openness to experience among agnostics and Christians but not atheists.
Bibliographic reference |
Karim, Moïse ; Saroglou, Vassilis. “I am agnostic, not atheist”: The role of open-minded, prosocial, and believing dispositions. In: Self and Identity, Vol. 23, no. 3-4, p. 248-267 (2024) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/287431 |