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Title
Secularism in science: The role of religious affiliation in assessments of scientists’ trustworthiness
Author(s)
Beauchamp, Alexandra L.;Rios, Kimberly
Published
2020
Publisher
Public Understanding of Science
Published Version DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/0963662519888599
Pre-Publication DOI
DOI for Open Access preprint or postprint version of article
10.5281/zenodo.5879349
Abstract
With controversies surrounding numerous science topics, including vaccinations and climate change, science skepticism in the United States is of growing concern. Some skepticism of science may stem from the perceived association between science and atheism, as well as stereotypes of religious individuals as prosocial. Three studies examine how scientists’ religious affiliation (or lack thereof) influences perceptions of their warmth and trustworthiness among Christian participants. (Study 1 also includes atheist participants for comparison purposes.) Whereas atheist participants evaluate atheist scientists as more trustworthy than scientists from various religious groups (e.g. Christian, Jewish, and Muslim), Christian participants consistently evaluate atheist scientists as less trustworthy and less warm than religious scientists, and not exclusively Christian scientists. These effects are explained, in part, by Christian participants’ perceptions that atheist scientists are less motivated by prosociality compared to religiously affiliated scientists and, as Study 3 demonstrates, have a negative association with trust in scientists in general.
Keywords
public understanding of science;representations of science;science and religion;science attitudes and perceptions;science communication;scientists-attitudes
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PUB25836