I'm Ok With What I Don't Know: Uncertainty Doesn't Trouble Nonreligious Americans
September 16, 2019
September 16, 2019
WASHINGTON, Sept. 16 -- The American Sociological Association issued the following news release:
With 25% of Americans now identifying as religiously unaffiliated, scholars and pundits have written reams linking the lack of defined religious belief and affiliation to a host of modern ills: social isolation, depression, anxiety. From the New York Times' David Brooks, who characterizes millions of secularized people as potentially "suffer[ing] from a loss of meaning and an uncons . . .
With 25% of Americans now identifying as religiously unaffiliated, scholars and pundits have written reams linking the lack of defined religious belief and affiliation to a host of modern ills: social isolation, depression, anxiety. From the New York Times' David Brooks, who characterizes millions of secularized people as potentially "suffer[ing] from a loss of meaning and an uncons . . .