Abstract

Over the past century, a remarkable body of research about the relationship of intelligence and religiosity has accumulated. So far, the majority of studies that investigated this relationship showed a negative correlation, indicating lower cognitive abilities of individuals reporting stronger religious beliefs. Although the effect direction has been observed to be largely consistent across studies, the reported effect strength varied substantially across studies. Several potentially moderating variables such as different intelligence and religiosity assessment methods, educational status of samples, and participant sex have been proposed as likely candidates for explaining systematic differences in effect strengths. However, the effects of these moderators are to date unclear. Consequently, we focused in investigating effects of these moderating variables on the intelligence and religiosity link in an update of prior meta-analytical investigations in n = 89 (k = 105; N = 201,457) studies. Random-effects analyses showed a small but robust negative association between intelligence and religiosity r = -.14 (p < .001; 95% CI [-.17, -.12]). Effects were stronger for (i) psychometric intelligence tests than for proxy measures such as grade point averages and (ii) general population and college samples than pre-college samples. Moreover, we provide evidence from combinatorial, multiverse, and specification curve analyses that further corroborates the robustness of the investigated association. Out of 192 reasonable specifications all 135 (70.4%) significant summary effects were negative. In all, our results show small but robust negative associations between religiosity and intelligence that are differentiated in strength but generalize in terms of direction over moderating variables.

Highlights

  • Intelligence and religiosity associations have been investigated for more than 90 years

  • Convergent results from a large number of reasonable specifications indicate that these effects generalize and remain robust even when accounting for different moderators, with some allowance to be made for varying effect strengths

  • The intelligence and religiosity link appeared to be stronger when psychometric intelligence was assessed compared to less salient proxies of intelligence such as GPA

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Summary

Introduction

Intelligence and religiosity associations have been investigated for more than 90 years . As early as in 1928, two studies [1,2] reported negative correlations between cognitive abilities and religiosity, indicating lower religiosity of more intelligent individuals. The association of intelligence and religiosity has been examined in several nations, by means of different intelligence measures, and with different methods to assess religiosity. Negative associations between intelligence and religiosity have been well-established.

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