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salvorhardin

(9,995 posts)
Wed Feb 29, 2012, 10:58 AM Feb 2012

Does having a college degree affect whether or not you believe in mythical creatures?

Yes! But not always the way you think, according to this interesting result from a recent 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair poll concerning belief in mythical creatures. For Big Foot, unicorns, and vampires, people without college degrees were more likely to believe in them than those with degrees. However, that's reversed for the Loch Ness Monster and fairies. 26% of college graduates believed in Nessie, versus 18% of non-graduates. Meanwhile, 10% of people with degrees believed in fairies, compared to only 2% of non-degree holders. It should also be noted that while more people without degrees believed in vampires than those who did finish college, the difference is really slim -- 6% and 4% respectively.

Link: http://www.vanityfair.com/magazine/2012/03/60-minutes-poll-201203#slide=1

10 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Does having a college degree affect whether or not you believe in mythical creatures? (Original Post) salvorhardin Feb 2012 OP
One could only hope Newest Reality Feb 2012 #1
A decent acquaintance with English literature would encourage belief in fairies. dimbear Mar 2012 #2
No surprise, intelligent people know Sasquatch's may exist Ter Mar 2012 #3
I"m an intelligent person TZ Mar 2012 #8
I said "Only the ignorant would say no for sure" Ter Mar 2012 #9
If you are so intelligent, RebelOne Apr 2012 #10
Not really a mythical creature... SwissTony Mar 2012 #4
I think this data is being misrepresented Silent3 Mar 2012 #5
It needs to be broken down the field of study. DavidDvorkin Mar 2012 #6
It just goes to show you that MineralMan Mar 2012 #7

Newest Reality

(12,712 posts)
1. One could only hope
Wed Feb 29, 2012, 11:30 AM
Feb 2012

that by application of the tools that a wide spectrum of language and thought can provide, that the nature of belief itself would be investigated thoroughly.

Once the nature of belief is divined, then one is free to turn what is considered serious, dogmatic or literally interpreted into symbolic liberation. Then, one becomes free to "believe" in a more creative and enjoyable way as play and recreation without a rigid compulsion to promulgate and enforce a belief.

Of knowledge, we know so little for a fact of what is, so we resort to beliefs that are either flexible or considered, erroneously, to be concrete. So, belief can be a placeholder for the potential of direct experience, a metaphor for function or change, or a form of playful ways to interpret what living in a world of abstraction provides.

dimbear

(6,271 posts)
2. A decent acquaintance with English literature would encourage belief in fairies.
Thu Mar 1, 2012, 05:12 AM
Mar 2012

Not just the J M Barrie variety, either, altho that's a start. BTW, there exists a remarkable repertoire of 'photos' of fairies taken mostly in English gardens in, mostly, the Edwardian era. A truly obscure corner of the world's arcana, some quite gorgeous.



TZ

(42,998 posts)
8. I"m an intelligent person
Tue Mar 27, 2012, 06:52 AM
Mar 2012

and I've yet to see anything convincing about Sasquatch's existing. We can get pictures of animals that dwell thousands of feet below the surface of the sea but no good pictures of a large humanoid type forest dweller? Uh huh. I must be ignorant.
Oh yeah I have a Bachelor's in Zoology btw, clearly I know nothing on the topic.

 

Ter

(4,281 posts)
9. I said "Only the ignorant would say no for sure"
Reply to TZ (Reply #8)
Tue Mar 27, 2012, 02:14 PM
Mar 2012

You sound like a skeptic, which is fine. I also don't care about degrees, because they mean next to nothing (otherwise, all Supreme Court decisions would be 9-0). I don't have one in the field, but I'd be willing to bet I know a lot more on the subject because I've been fascinated with squatch's for 30 years, with tons of books and TV specials in my collection as well. But if you want to throw it out there, try looking up Professor Jeff Meldrum.

http://www.squatchopedia.com/index.php/Jeff_Meldrum

RebelOne

(30,947 posts)
10. If you are so intelligent,
Reply to TZ (Reply #8)
Thu Apr 5, 2012, 05:24 PM
Apr 2012

you would also be aware of the English language and punctuation. Sasquatach's is a possessive and not a possessive noun.

SwissTony

(2,560 posts)
4. Not really a mythical creature...
Sun Mar 25, 2012, 02:15 PM
Mar 2012

but each year, I believe my miserable sports teams will do better than the last year.

Betting on the existence of unicorns doesn't seem so far-fetched.

 

Silent3

(15,909 posts)
5. I think this data is being misrepresented
Sun Mar 25, 2012, 06:31 PM
Mar 2012

The question is "Which mythical creature do you think is most likely to actually exist?", not "Which creature that you believe exists is most likely to exist?"

I'd take the question as asked as a hypothetical, having to choose the most likely of a bunch of things that all seem unlikely to me, and it wouldn't be correct at all to treat my answer as a statement of a mythical creature that I actually believe in.

MineralMan

(147,574 posts)
7. It just goes to show you that
Sun Mar 25, 2012, 07:50 PM
Mar 2012

a college degree is no guarantee of the ability to think critically. It is very interesting to note that not one instance has anything near a majority who believe. Loch Ness Monster belief appears to be the one with the most graduate believers. That's due to the limited plausibility of some large animal still living, but in very small numbers. That's something a rational person might believe, although I do not.

However, the rest are all so small a percentage that they may safely be discounted.

Now, if you look at the percentage that believe in some sort of supernatural deity, the numbers will be much higher in both groups. That sort of mythical creature enjoys a certain popularity among many groups of people, educated and less so alike.

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