Meta-analysis of 83 studies produces ‘very strong’ evidence for a negative relationship between intelligence and religiosity

Authored by psypost.org and submitted by AntifaSuperSwoledier

New research confirms that there is a negative relationship between religiosity and intelligence. The findings have been published in the scientific journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.

“Religiosity is a pervasive phenomenon. Its influence can be felt in all spheres of life. However, a sizeable portion of the population defines itself as atheist. Why do some people decide not to be religious? I thought it was an important and fascinating question,” said study author Miron Zuckerman of the University of Rochester.

Zuckerman and his colleagues previously conducted a meta-analysis of 63 studies, which found “a reliable negative relation between intelligence and religiosity.” In other words, religious people tend to be less intelligent than non-religious people on average.

But that finding provoked a great deal of controversy. “Comments in the media ranged from expressions of surprise and curiosity to skepticism or even disdain about what intelligence tests actually measure,” the researchers wrote in their new study.

So Zuckerman and his colleagues decided to conduct another analysis with updated data. “Collecting new data to ascertain the validity of previous findings is crucial for science anytime, but especially when the subject matter is socially relevant and emotionally fraught,” they explained.

The new meta-analysis, which included data from 61 studies from the previous meta-analysis and new data from 22 studies conducted from 2012 to 2018, confirmed the previous findings. It also found no evidence that the negative relationship between religiosity and intelligence was growing weaker in recent years.

The results were based on data from more than 110,000 participants in total.

“The evidence that there is a negative relation between intelligence and religiosity is very strong. But the effect size of the relation is small. This means that there are factors besides intelligence that explain why people are or are not religious. It also means that although more intelligent people tend to be less religious on the average, predicting religiosity from intelligence for individuals is fallible,” Zuckerman told PsyPost.

The researchers also found evidence that cognitive styles explained some of the relationship between religiosity and intelligence. In particular, an analytic (as opposed to intuitive) thinking style was related to both increased intelligence and reduced religiosity.

“Although we present reasons for the negative relation, the empirical evidence for these explanation is not definitive,” Zuckerman said.

In addition, most of the studies were conducted in the United States. It is unclear if the findings apply to Eastern religions such as Buddhism and Hinduism.

“The negative relation was established for western societies. We don’t know whether it generalizes to other populations, particularly those in the Far East,” Zuckerman explained.

The study, “The Negative Intelligence–Religiosity Relation: New and Confirming Evidence“, was authored by Miron Zuckerman, Chen Li, Shengxin Lin, and Judith A. Hall.

PassedMyPrime on November 15th, 2019 at 17:37 UTC »

Wow. $36 to be given access to the study for only 24 hrs. Now I see why most researchers and scientists have a problem with their submitted work being kept from the public behind paywalls. The worst part is they don’t ever even see this money as it’s the publishers that only receive it.

nyxko on November 15th, 2019 at 13:40 UTC »

From the article: “The evidence that there is a negative relation between intelligence and religiosity is very strong. But the effect size of the relation is small. This means that there are factors besides intelligence that explain why people are or are not religious. It also means that although more intelligent people tend to be less religious on the average, predicting religiosity from intelligence for individuals is fallible.”

potatoaster on November 15th, 2019 at 12:21 UTC »

Excerpts of potential interest:

Figure 1: Funnel plot of the 83 correlations between intelligence and religiosity

"One possibility [is] that people use their religious beliefs [to obtain] self-enhancement, a sense of empowerment, and better self-regulation... extensive research evidence that more intelligent people already benefit from higher self-evaluation, a higher sense of control, and more efficient self-control. As such, more intelligent people have less of a need for religiosity"

"It is possible that more intelligent people are less religious because they are more rational, an inference that is consistent with the finding that the IRR was partially mediated by analytic style"

"Most of these studies were conducted in the West, primarily in the United States. Our findings, therefore, do not apply to Eastern religions such as Buddhism and Hinduism."