International

Study suggests faith influences opinion about space exploration

By Dennis Sadowski | Catholic News Service
Sunday, January 11, 2015

Washington — How people value space exploration may just depend on someone’s particular faith. An analysis of the results of several surveys by a University of Dayton political science professor found that Catholics are more supportive of the U.S. maintaining a leading role in probing the depths of space and the search for extraterrestrial intelligence than people of other faiths.
Political scientist Joshua Ambrosius told Catholic News Service evangelical Protestants are significantly less likely than people of other faiths to see the value of the nation’s space endeavors. Evangelicals also tended to have less knowledge about space, he said.
Why evangelicals are less supportive of space exploration is uncertain, but having grown up in an evangelical family, Ambrosius offered some pos-sible reasons.
“In my family, there wasn’t a lot of discussion about science and its relevance. I had influences that would question the findings and contributions of modern science, particularly the view of evolutionary origins (of humans). I grew up in a church and a tradition very oriented around creation science,” he said.
Ambrosius studied factors outlined in four surveys, including knowledge of space, interest in space, support for funding of space exploration, views on the benefits of space exploration, space optimism and space nationalism — whether the U.S. should be a leader in space exploration.
He analyzed data from the 2010 General Social Survey of the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago; the June 2011 Political Survey of the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press; the April 2010 Political Future Survey and the spring 2009 General Public Science Survey. He broke down responses from Catholics, evangelicals, mainline Protestants, Jews, Eastern religions and people with no religion.
“Evangelicals express significantly higher expectations that an asteroid will hit earth, but significantly lower expectations of the discovery of life off the earth,” he said in his report, “Separation of Church and Space: Religious Influences on Support for Space Exploration Policy.”
Ambrosius presented his report in November at the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion conference in Indianapolis.

He found that evangelicals are the least knowledgeable, interested and supportive of space exploration. He also learned that Jews and members of Eastern religions were most knowledgeable and supportive.
Evangelicals also are more certain that Jesus will return in the next 40 years than they are that humans will make significant progress in space exploration during that time, Ambrosius wrote.
For Catholics, the depth of the prac-tice of their faith does not seem to matter when it comes to supporting the country’s space program.
The political scientist said he planned to look at the connection be-tween the teachings of evangelical leaders and views of people in the pews regarding space.
“There seems to be a role that church leaders, particularly among evangelicals, play in developing space policy and space exploration,” Am-brosius explained.
The findings are significant because evangelical Christians could influence policymaking when it comes to funding space exploration. Evangelicals comprise about 26 percent of the U.S. population, according to the Religious Landscape Survey of the Pew Research Center’s Religion and Pub-lic Life Project.

Topics:

  • catholic news service
  • faith
  • space
  • nasa

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