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Research Article

“I am agnostic, not atheist”: The role of open-minded, prosocial, and believing dispositions

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Received 20 Apr 2023, Accepted 15 May 2024, Published online: 27 May 2024
 

ABSTRACT

Does agnosticism versus atheism reflect only epistemic or deeper personality and other individual differences? Following a previous study in Belgium, we investigated this question among 537 UK adults, self-identified as Christian, agnostic, or atheist. Agnostics were midway between religionists and atheists on prosocial dispositions (agreeableness, belief in world’s benevolence), outcomes of intuitive thinking (paranormal beliefs, religiosity), and non-theistic forms of spirituality; and showed greater openness to experience and weaker convictional self-identification than atheists. Personality uniquely, beyond religious socialization, predicted agnosticism versus atheism. Spirituality denoted, across all three groups, connectedness with the world, interest in the paranormal, and life satisfaction; among nonbelievers, personal belief in a just-world; and prosocial dispositions and openness to experience among agnostics and Christians but not atheists.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

We received no funding for this study.

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