20% of Atheist Scientists Are Spiritual
Source: livescience.com
The pursuit of science can be compatible with spirituality.
This conclusion comes out of a new study in which 275 elite scientists were interviewed by a team of sociologists. One in five atheistic scientists who were interviewed self-identified as "spiritual."
"These spiritual atheist scientists are seeking a core sense of truth through spirituality — one that is generated by and consistent with the work they do as scientists," said Elaine Howard Ecklund, a sociologist at Rice University and lead author of the new study, which will appear in the June issue of the journal Sociology of Religion.
The pursuit of science can be compatible with spirituality.
This conclusion comes out of a new study in which 275 elite scientists were interviewed by a team of sociologists. One in five atheistic scientists who were interviewed self-identified as "spiritual."
"These spiritual atheist scientists are seeking a core sense of truth through spirituality — one that is generated by and consistent with the work they do as scientists," said Elaine Howard Ecklund, a sociologist at Rice University and lead author of the new study, which will appear in the June issue of the journal Sociology of Religion.
According to Ecklund, many of the scientists viewed both science and spirituality as "quests for meaning" that do not invoke faith. Religion, on the other hand, requires belief without empirical evidence, and is thus incompatible with the pursuit of science.
"There’s spirituality among even the most secular scientists," Ecklund said in a press release. "Spirituality pervades both the religious and atheist thought. It’s not an either/or.
"This challenges the idea that scientists, and other groups we typically deem as secular, are devoid of those big ’Why am I here?’ questions. They too have these basic human questions and a desire to find meaning."
Another difference between religion and spirituality, according to the atheistic scientists who were interviewed, is that the former is a communal, collective endeavor, while the latter is personal.
This article was provided by Life’s Little Mysteries, a sister site to LiveScience.
Article from: livescience.com
Also tune into:
Bruce Lipton - The Biology of Belief
Lynne McTaggart - The Intention Experiment
Paul Levy - George W Bush & our Collective Psychosis
Robin Falkov - Herbs, Health and Food Freedom & Radiation Defense
Sonia Barrett - The Cosmic Game in 3D
Nigel Kerner & Andrew Silverman - Shroud of Turin & The Grey Aliens
Gary Schwartz - Communication With the Deceased & Life After Death
Jay Weidner - Kubrick’s Odyssey & The Brotherhood of Saturn
Aaron Franz - The Philosophical Roots of Transhumanism