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{{Main|Irreligion by country}}
{{Main|Irreligion by country}}
[[Dentsu|Dentsu Communication Institute]] provides data for respondents, who stated they have "no religion". Phil Zuckerman uses the strictest definition, citing "atheist and agnostic" proportion numbers. The numbers come from different years, and might not be accurate for countries with governments that require or urge religion or secularism.
[[Dentsu|Dentsu Communication Institute]] provides data for respondents, who stated they have "no religion". Phil Zuckerman uses the strictest definition, citing "atheist and agnostic" proportion numbers. The numbers come from different years, and might not be accurate for countries with governments that require or urge religion or secularism.
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{| class="wikitable sortable" style="text-align:right;"
! Country!!Dentsu<ref>[[Dentsu]] Communication Institute [http://www2.ttcn.ne.jp/~honkawa/9460.html 電通総研・日本リサーチセンター編「世界60カ国価値観データブック] {{ja icon}}</ref> (2006)!!Zuckerman<ref>[http://www.adherents.com/largecom/com_atheist.html The Largest Atheist / Agnostic Populations] Zuckerman, 2005</ref> (2005)
! Country!!Dentsu<ref>[[Dentsu]] Communication Institute [http://www2.ttcn.ne.jp/~honkawa/9460.html 電通総研・日本リサーチセンター編「世界60カ国価値観データブック] {{ja icon}}</ref> (2006)!!Zuckerman<ref>[http://www.adherents.com/largecom/com_atheist.html The Largest Atheist / Agnostic Populations] Zuckerman, 2005</ref> (2005)

Revision as of 12:46, 8 June 2010

Atheists, agnostics and nonreligious, by the Dentsu Institute (2006) and Zuckerman (2005)[1]
Gallup Religiosity Index 2009[2]

Irreligion is an absence of, indifference towards, and/or hostility towards religion.[3] Depending on the context, it may be understood as referring to atheism, deism, nontheism, agnosticism, ignosticism, antireligion, skepticism, freethought, or secular humanism. Irreligious people may have convictions equal in depth to those of religious adherents. For instance, followers of the life stance of Humanism may regard themselves as just as deeply believing in their life stance as corresponding to any religious belief.

Although people classified as irreligious might not follow any religion, not all are necessarily without belief in the supernatural or in deities;[original research?] such a person may be a non-religious/non-practicing theist or even an agnostic theist.[citation needed] In particular, those who associate organized religion with negative qualities, but still hold spiritual beliefs, might describe themselves as irreligious or agnostic theist.

List of countries by Irreligion

Dentsu Communication Institute provides data for respondents, who stated they have "no religion". Phil Zuckerman uses the strictest definition, citing "atheist and agnostic" proportion numbers. The numbers come from different years, and might not be accurate for countries with governments that require or urge religion or secularism.

Country Dentsu[4] (2006) Zuckerman[5] (2005)
 China 23% 8 – 14%
 Estonia 76% 49%
 Sweden 25% 46 – 85%
 Denmark 10% 43 – 80%
 Norway 31 – 72%
 Czech Republic 54 – 61%
 France 43% 43 – 54%
 Japan 52% 64 – 65%
 United Kingdom 31 – 44%
 Finland 12% 28 – 60%
 Mongolia 9%
 Australia 24 – 25%
 Netherlands 55% 39 – 44%
 New Zealand 20 – 22%
 Belarus 48% 17%
 Cuba 7%
 Russia 48% 24 – 48%
 Albania 70%
 Bulgaria 30% 34 – 40%
 Latvia 41% 20 – 29%
 Belgium 35% 42 – 43%
 Vietnam 46% 81%
 Hungary 43% 32 – 46%
 Slovenia 30% 35 – 38%
 Spain 16% 15 – 24%
 Taiwan 24%
 Germany 25% 41 – 49%
 Uruguay 12%
 Switzerland 17 – 27%
 Canada 26% 19 – 30%
 South Korea 37% 30 – 52%
 Ukraine 42% 20%
 Lithuania 19% 13%
 Slovakia 23% 10 – 28%
 Israel 15 – 37%
 Singapore 13%
 Kazakhstan 11 – 12%
 Austria 12% 18 – 26%
 Ireland 7%
 Argentina 13% 4 – 8%
 Chile 34%
 United States 20% 3 – 9%
 Kyrgyzstan 7%
 Venezuela 27%
 Croatia 13% 7%
 Greece 4% 16%
 Luxembourg 30%
 Armenia 14%
 Mexico 21%
 Portugal 11% 4 – 9%
 Italy 18% 6 – 15%
 Iceland 4% 16 – 23%
 Poland 5%
 Romania 2%
 Dominican Republic 7%
 India 7%
 Iran 30%
United Kingdom Northern Ireland 16%
 North Korea 15%
 Peru 5%
 Puerto Rico 11%
 South Africa 11%
 Philippines 11%
 Turkey 3%
 Uganda 1%
 Serbia and Montenegro 6%
 Nigeria 1%
 Tanzania 2%
 Malta 1%

See also

References

  1. ^ Based on the data of the Dentsu Communication Institute and the data of Zuckerman. Largest values taken.
  2. ^ The Religiosity Index is a measure of the importance of religion for respondents and their self-reported attendance of religious services. For religions in which attendance at services is limited, care must be used in interpreting the data. (Gallup WorldView)
  3. ^ Irreligion. Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Random House, Inc. (accessed: December 14, 2008).
  4. ^ Dentsu Communication Institute 電通総研・日本リサーチセンター編「世界60カ国価値観データブック Template:Ja icon
  5. ^ The Largest Atheist / Agnostic Populations Zuckerman, 2005