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2001 Opinion Poll on Beliefs in the United States

SURVEY INDICATES MORE AMERICANS “WITHOUT FAITH”

29.4 Million “Do Not Subscribe To Any Religious Identification”

The American Atheist News reported in November 2001 the American Religious Identification Survey 2001 carried out under the auspices of the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. It is considered a follow-up study of a 1990 census.

The survey and news reports about the study noted that one of the most significant findings involved growth in that segment of the adult population "identifying with no religion."

In 1990, 14.3 million or roughly 8% identified with this category. The new ARIS count now shows that the non-believer population has grown to 29.4
million, roughly 14.1% of the American community. The ARIS team notes that the 1990 figure "may be downwardly biased due to a slight change in the working of the key survey question in 2001. In seeking a more accurate measure of identification, the clause 'if any' was added this year to the question, 'What religion do you identify with?'"

Jews and Hispanics were among the ethnic groups surveyed by ARIS. Fifty-seven percent of those identified as Hispanic also indicated their religion as Roman Catholic, with 22% listing their faith as one of the Protestant denominations. "Other religious identification" stood at 5%, and 12% of Hispanics "indicated that they have no religion."

There are about 5.3 million Jews in America, with only 2.83 million saying that they are believers in the Jewish faith. A full 1.08 million were "adherents of no religion," and 1.36 million identified as Jews embraced a faith other than Judaism.

More Americans do not identify with any particular religion. In 1990, 90% of adults considered themselves part of a faith-based group; that figure has now dropped to 81%. Those considering themselves to be Christians stood at 86% in 1990, but now only 77% do.

Interestingly, it is "non-mainstream" denominations which seem to be gathering more followers, although they constitute less than 1% of the population. Based on responses, Scientology presently has 55,000 (up from 45,000 a decade ago); Unitarian / Universalists stand at 629,000; and Ethical Culturalists at 4,000.

Terminology seems to play a major role in how non-believers distinguish themselves within their own demographic category. The 1990 survey included three descriptions (without definitions), "Agnostic," "Humanist" and "No Religion." A decade ago, that described an estimated 14,331,000 people, or roughly 8.2% of the population.

According to the ARIS 2001 survey, the total "No Religion Specified" category has grown to 29,481,000, roughly 14.1% of the population. That figure could be low, since 5.4% of potential respondents refused to discuss their preference, if any, for faith. Within the "No Religion Groups," the latest survey measured the three categories from the 1990 census, with new descriptions for "Atheist" and "Secular." In the latter category, 902,000 or roughly 0.4% identify as Atheists to the telephone survey. Slightly larger is the "Agnostic" category, an estimated 991,000 individuals representing 0.5%.

Humanists came in at an estimated 49,000, with only 53,000 under the category of "Secular." Contrary to perceptions in many non-believer circles, "Atheist" seems to be the label of choice more often within our segment of the population than "Humanist" or "Secular." "Agnostic" is slightly ahead, with most simply referring to themselves as having "No Religion."

Those Americans of "No Religion," the "un-churched," exceed the numbers of adherents in all but the two top Christian sects (Catholics and Baptists). Even the number of those identified as "Atheist" is larger than denominations such as Seventh-day Adventist, Assemblies of God, Eastern Orthodox, United Church of Christ and the Church of God.

Religious belief / disbelief were broken down further by the ARIS census. Women, for instance, were more likely than men to describe their personal outlook as religious, as were older Americans in general. Black Americans were least likely to describe themselves as secular, while Asian Americans were most likely to do so.

The ARIS study found "More than thirty-three million American adults, about 16% of the total U.S. adult population report that they have changed their religious preference or identification." The phrase "a generation of seekers" is applied to those who are middle-aged baby boomers. The survey also notes,


"switching has involved not only the shift of people's spiritual loyalties from one religion to another - which could reflect some kind of spiritual seeking - but also, and perhaps more importantly, a dropping out of religion altogether..."

One of the biggest growth sectors due to this "switching" is found among the 29 million-plus Americans who profess "No Religion." A total of 6,622,494 persons are thought to have "switched in" from other categories (all of them religious), producing a 23% increase. Only about 5% of the "No Religion" category monitored in 1990 "found religion," abandoning disbelief for some creed.

An estimated 54% Americans are married according to the U.S. Census, with about 58 million listed as "Single, never married" or 27%. Approximately 4.79 million are "separated," another 21-million-plus Divorced, and about 13.8 million Widowed. ARIS found slightly larger numbers of married people (59%), with only 20% as "Single, never married." Five percent reported "Single, living with partner), or roughly 11 million Americans.

In the "No Religion" category measuring lifestyles of the 29-million or so members of this cohort, 33% were single, 22% single and co-habiting, 19% married, and 9% divorced. Six percent were widowed. Only Buddhists (47%) and Muslim / Islam believers (37%) exceeded the numbers in the singles category. But the "No Religion" group showed low rates of divorce compared to religious counterparts. Buddhists and those with no religion are most likely to be political independents..."

"Those with 'no religion' constitute the largest group in Oregon,
Washington, Idaho and Wyoming," notes the study. "In contrast, the percentage of adults who adhere to 'no religion' is below 10 percent in North and South Dakota, the Carolinas, Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee.

ARIS recognised the "wide and possibly growing swath of secularism among Americans." It also began the hunt for specific numbers and categories within the "No Religious Groups," for the first time giving Atheists and those identified with the label "Secular" their own sub-category, along with the 1990 labels Humanist, Agnostic and No
Religion. Under this count, 902,000 Americans might use "Atheist" to describe themselves, with slightly more (991,000) proclaiming themselves as "Agnostics", and 49,000 identifying with the Humanist Label. Another 53,000 use "Secular," but by far the preference is for "No Religion," a robust 27-million-plus.

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