
A meme has been making the rounds that suggests that the deeper one studies science, the more likely one is to believe in God. Is this true? The 2023 Pew Research report below contains data directly relevant to this claim.

Albert Einstein did not say, “The more I study science, the more I believe in God.” While the quote is widely attributed to him, it’s a misquotation or a paraphrase of his writings. Einstein did express a sense of awe and wonder at the universe’s complexity and order, which he linked to a deeper faith in the universe’s creator, but he did not believe in a personal God or subscribe to traditional religious dogma. He identified with a pantheistic view, seeing the universe itself as divine. He also stated that he did not believe in a personal God and that religious concepts were often childish.
➘ Highlights From Pew Research:
◉ Belief in God or a Higher Power
- Scientists (AAAS members, Pew 2009)
- 33% believe in God
- 18% believe in a universal spirit or higher power
- 41% do not believe in any God or higher power en.wikipedia.org+15pewresearch.org+15pew.org+15
- General U.S. population (Pew 2023)
- 54% believe in “God as described in the Bible”
- 34% believe in “some other higher power or spiritual force”
- 10% do not believe in any higher power en.wikipedia.org+2pewresearch.org+2teenvogue.com+2
◉ Summary Table
| Belief Category | Scientists | General Public |
|---|---|---|
| Belief in God | 33% | 54% |
| Belief in Other higher power | 18% | 34% |
| Total believing in God or power | 51% | 88% |
| No belief in any higher power | 41% | 10% |
◉ Interpretation
✓ Scientists are half as likely as the general public to believe in a God or higher power (51% vs 88%).
✓ They are far less likely to hold belief in an impersonal spiritual force—18% vs 34%.
✓ The proportion with no belief is much higher among scientists (41% vs 10%).
◉ Why Scientists Are Far Less Likely to Believe in a God

The significant discrepancy between scientists and the general public regarding belief in God invites a deeper examination of the factors shaping these divergent outlooks. Surveys consistently show that while about 88% of the general population in the U.S. believes in some form of deity or higher power, only around 51% of scientists do—and just 33% believe in God specifically. This disparity is not incidental. It arises from methodological commitments, epistemological values, and cultural contexts that systematically shape scientific cognition in ways that are often at odds with traditional theism.
1. Methodological Naturalism as a Cognitive Filter
Science operates on the heuristic of methodological naturalism—the idea that phenomena is far more likely explained by natural causes rather than invoking supernatural agents. This is not a metaphysical denial of the supernatural, but rather a practical constraint adopted due to the positive track record of methodological naturalism, and the fact that supernatural explanations are untestable, unrepeatable, and offer no predictive power. Scientists trained in this method grow accustomed to seeking explanations grounded in evidence, mechanisms, and causality. Belief in a deity—especially one that interacts with the world in miraculous or untraceable ways—contradicts this heuristic. Over time, the repeated success of natural explanations in replacing supernatural ones reduces the perceived need for a god hypothesis.
2. The Demand for Epistemic Justification
Scientific thinking is shaped by an epistemic rigor that prizes falsifiability, replicability, and evidence proportional to the claim. Belief in God, by contrast, tends to rely on personal testimony, historical tradition, or faith—none of which meet scientific standards of verification. Consequently, scientists are trained to suspend or reject belief when evidence is weak, ambiguous, or absent. This doesn’t entail dogmatic atheism; rather, it cultivates a high evidential threshold for extraordinary claims. The existence of a supernatural being, especially one posited to be omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent, is among the most extraordinary of all claims—and thus demands a level of evidence that, for most scientists, has not been met.
3. Exposure to Competing Explanations
Many phenomena historically attributed to divine action—disease, lightning, planetary motion, human behavior—are now explained in fully naturalistic terms. Scientists are deeply aware of these explanatory displacements. Evolutionary biology, in particular, undermines many teleological arguments for God by showing how complexity and adaptation can arise from undirected processes. Cosmology and neuroscience likewise erode intuitive arguments for divine design or mind-body dualism. As explanatory gaps shrink, the appeal of God as a necessary explanatory agent diminishes in kind.
4. Sociological and Cultural Selection Effects
Science is not practiced in a vacuum. Those drawn to scientific careers often possess a predisposition toward skepticism, open-ended inquiry, and independence from traditional authority. These traits correlate negatively with religious belief. Moreover, scientific communities tend to normalize secular worldviews, not through explicit indoctrination, but via a culture that rewards evidence-based reasoning and penalizes uncritical acceptance of dogma. This creates a selection effect: individuals more inclined toward critical inquiry and doubt are both more likely to enter science and more likely to relinquish belief in God over time.
5. Resistance to Emotional Intuition and Cognitive Biases
Religious belief is often sustained by psychological dispositions—agency detection, pattern recognition, need for control, and existential reassurance. Scientists, by training, learn to inhibit premature inferences, resist anthropomorphic intuitions, and adopt probabilistic thinking. While laypeople may interpret coincidental events as meaningful or divinely orchestrated, scientists are more likely to recognize cognitive biases at work. This metacognitive awareness reduces the plausibility of intuitive theistic beliefs.
◉ Conclusion
The lower rates of theism among scientists are neither the result of arrogance nor hostility toward religion. Rather, they are the byproducts of a disciplined epistemology that emphasizes parsimony, skepticism, and empiricism. The scientific mindset is not inherently atheistic, but it is inherently cautious about accepting extraordinary claims without extraordinary evidence. When applied consistently, this disposition leads many scientists to a position of non-belief—not out of ideological commitment, but out of fidelity to the very reasoning processes that undergird scientific progress.



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