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Genetics determines your religion

jay gw

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March 21, 2005 — The Georgia woman who reportedly convinced an alleged gunman to end his killing spree said she and Brian Nichols talked about their families, the Bible and their faith.

"I believe God brought him to my door," Ashley Smith told reporters after calling 911 and alerting police that Nichols, the suspect in the slayings of four people, including an Atlanta judge, was in her apartment.

Smith's faith may have led her to believe that Nichols targeted her for a reason, but scientists are asking what makes people like Smith maintain their faith in the first place.

If new research is to be believed, when it comes to fostering religious adults, genetics play a significant role.

Recent studies with twins show that while environmental factors play a big part in determining a person's degree of faith early in life, later on genetics take over and become a dominant factor as people make the transition into adulthood and either strengthen or reduce the role of religion in their lives.

"Our findings show that the differences in religiousness among individuals are due in part to genetic differences among individuals," said Laura Koenig, a graduate student at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and lead author of the twin study in the current issue of the Journal of Personality.

This could mean that people like Smith are, to some extent, hardwired in their faith.

Among the many areas where identical twins showed strong overlap was spirituality — they were twice as likely as fraternal twins to share as much or as little faith as their long lost sibling.

http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/Health/story?id=589469&page=1
 
I wonder who, among my ancestors, are atheist. I ask this because none of them, to my knowledge, are.
 
thaiboxerken said:
I wonder who, among my ancestors, are atheist. I ask this because none of them, to my knowledge, are.

Perhaps you're only pretending to be an atheist. How much faith do you have in your lack of faith? :)
 
jay gw said:
March 21, 2005 — The Georgia woman who reportedly convinced an alleged gunman to end his killing spree said she and Brian Nichols talked about their families, the Bible and their faith.

"I believe God brought him to my door," Ashley Smith told reporters after calling 911 and alerting police that Nichols, the suspect in the slayings of four people, including an Atlanta judge, was in her apartment.

Smith's faith may have led her to believe that Nichols targeted her for a reason, but scientists are asking what makes people like Smith maintain their faith in the first place.

If new research is to be believed, when it comes to fostering religious adults, genetics play a significant role.

Recent studies with twins show that while environmental factors play a big part in determining a person's degree of faith early in life, later on genetics take over and become a dominant factor as people make the transition into adulthood and either strengthen or reduce the role of religion in their lives.

"Our findings show that the differences in religiousness among individuals are due in part to genetic differences among individuals," said Laura Koenig, a graduate student at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and lead author of the twin study in the current issue of the Journal of Personality.

This could mean that people like Smith are, to some extent, hardwired in their faith.

Among the many areas where identical twins showed strong overlap was spirituality — they were twice as likely as fraternal twins to share as much or as little faith as their long lost sibling.

http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/Health/story?id=589469&page=1

I'm a bit confused by your topic title and your topic text...as usual. I thought the topic title regarded religion (christian, muslim, etc), not religiousness in general. Correct me if I'm mistaken.

I don't doubt the study. I think most humans are somewhat hardwired to having some degree of faith in the existence of god, et al, whether their 'logical' mind agrees or not. Sort of like most humans think spiders are icky...but not exactly.
 
Rob Lister said:
If observation is an indicator, any god. Maybe it's a left-over survival mechanism.

It could be, after all it gives people the illusion of having control of some aspects of life which are actually beyond our comprehension and power, it can also help going through hard times.
Imho, to some extent, fulfills the basic human need for safety and protection...
 

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