Today’s waning of traditional religion runs parallel with a waxing of popular interest in matters “spiritual.” While a growing body of qualitative research provides rich insights into the spiritual lives of the non-religious, we do not sufficiently understand the varieties and significance of spiritual experiences among the non-religious in the professional realm, particularly in domains like science. This paper reports findings from a study involving 100 qualitative interviews with non-religious physicists and biologists in various national contexts, designed to shed light on the categories, contexts, and consequences of spirituality among non-religious scientists. We find that non-religious scientists’ spiritual experiences fall into three distinct categories: aesthetic, immersive, and transcendent; which are occasioned by four types of contexts: nature, music or art, grief or loss, and science itself; and in turn can give rise to attitudinal changes requiring such cognitive accommodations as the selective suspension of disbelief and toleration of cognitive dissonance.
Attached Paper
Annual Meeting 2024
Categories, Contexts, and Consequences of Spirituality Among Non-Religious Scientists
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