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Between 1990 and 2010, 25 million Americans lost their religion. At the same time, they
also began spending 400 million hours per day on the internet. Coincidence? I don't
know.......
Hey everyone, Laci Green here for DNews. As religiosity in America continues to fall at
a pretty dramatic rate, scientists have been asking: huh? WHYYYY??? In a new study published
by MIT's Technology Review, the findings are a little...SHOCKING. Brace yourself. They've
found that the internet itself may be responsible for the decline of faith. Using the University
of Chicago's General Social Survey, computer scientist Allen Downey tracked the religious
affiliation of thousands of Americans against other variables like religious upbringing,
income, education, and...how much time you spend online. Here's what he found.
The strongest predictor of religious affiliation was being raised in that religion. So, if
you grew up Catholic or whatever, this is the best predictor of being Catholic as an
adult. Downey's statistics suggest that similarly, more people are being raised without a strong
religious affiliation. This is responsible for about 25% of the drop in religiosity.
Another 5% of the drop is attributed to the rise in college education, which has been
happening over the same period. Those with a higher education are less likely to call
themselves religious. And then.... the controversial portion...he found the second big drop of
25% is directly correlated with time spent online, a category of person which was basically
non-existent in the 80s. Which is a really interesting thing to think about. Could the
internet really be a catalyst for people losing their faith? Apparently, yeah! But it should
be noted that this is a CORRELATION, not a causation - a scientific mantra that must
be repeated ad nauseum. Basically: we can't conclude that the internet CAUSES people to
lose their faith just yet, but we can definitely observe a strong pattern that's occurring
here.
What might the internet have to do with it? One theory is that the internet makes it easy
for people with very different beliefs to connect personally, to communicate and challenge
the strength of their beliefs. Being more exposed to other ideologies also breaks people
out of the insulated bubble of their own physical communities, where that wasn't possible before
the web. The internet also provides a vast body of information about all different types
of belief systems -- which creates more of a demand to question your own. Of those belief
systems people are getting more information about is a non-religious worldview, which
is becoming a more well-known and accessible alternative to more traditional belief systems.
It's all very interesting to me -- and even moreso that there's still about 50% of the
religiosity drop that is unaccounted for. Down below (On our facebook page), what do
you think? Will the internet make atheists of us all? Or could the internet be used to
promote religious faith as well? Thanks for joining me folks, I'll see you next time with
more science updates!