New study reaffirms the link between conservative religious faith and climate change doubt [View all]
Because lets face it we already knew that conservative religiosity in the United States was closely tied to denying evolution. What wasnt so obvious was why views of global warming, or the environment, would seem to so closely track views on where we humans (and the rest of all life on Earth) come from. Yet it seems they do:
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Im writing on this again now because after posting about Rosenaus work, I learned about a
new academic study that seems highly consistent with his research, even as it also casts new light on the environmental side of things.
I think looking at that graphic, it very much resonates with our own work, explains David Konisky of Georgetown, co-author of the new paper.
The study, which Konisky authored with Matthew Arbuckle of the University of Cincinnati, draws on a vast dataset from the 2010 installment of the
Cooperative Congressional Election Study, which not only asks people about their religious views, affiliations, and habits, but also samples a huge group of Americans some 55,000 of them.
That large number allows the researchers to conduct a fine-grained analysis of the divergences in views on environmental matters between members of different major religious traditions (Catholics, Protestants, Jews) and also members of different denominations (Baptists, Methodists, Episcopalians, and so on) in the United States. That includes looking at how religiosity, a measure of how committed people are to their faiths and how much theyre involved in religious activities (like going to church), seems to influence those environmental views.
...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2015/05/29/this-fascinating-chart-on-faith-and-climate-change-denial-has-been-reinforced-by-new-research/
Don't know if this has been posted here at DU.
The article is fine. Just don't read the comments. Ugh.