One in five students responded that they were Atheists.
kuro_man wrote: » http://www.irishexaminer.com/breakingnews/ireland/students-rate-looking-good-as-more-important-than-religion-603483.html some interesting data... Also... ..with a capital A, I wonder did Mr. Nugent lobby for this.
"The survey found that 2.2% of students are Church of Ireland/Protestant, compared to 2011 census figures of 2.81% in the general population. Of the Catholic students surveyed, 61.5% said ‘Yes’ when asked if they take communion"
Sarky wrote: » Not terribly surprised, the most godless fun I've ever had has been in college. Was invited to an orgy at my last graduation. Pity my back was f*cked at the time. Ah well.
Irish Examiner wrote: Looking good is more important than religion to Irish college students, according to a recent survey.
kylith wrote: » I think that those figures nicely demonstrate the effect of the Mammy on the census; when they're away from home the number of Catholics drops dramatically.
Of the Catholic students surveyed, 61.5% said ‘Yes’ when asked if they take communion, only 32.2% believe that it is the body and blood of Christ.
NiallSparky wrote: » What's your point?
Corkfeen wrote: » I think my mother would have preferred me to look respectable(good) in college over being Catholic and she is a Catholic. The priorities of an Irish mammy are complex.
What's your point?
Morbert wrote: » Atheist, like theist, is not a proper noun. Giving it a capital letter implies atheism is some movement or subversive organisation when it is really just what students are naturally gravitating towards.
Dave! wrote: » 1 in 5 seems very low to me Would have expected a much high percentage than that to be honest
HurtLocker wrote: » These people who claim to be Catholic 57% yet 83% of people want abortion in Ireland. After all the religion thats shoved down out throats a huge chunk of proclaimed "Catholics" have no idea what saying "I am a Catholic" actually means.
article wrote: When asked how they would characterise their belief in God, only 37.5% state that they believe in God
kylith wrote: » I mean Mammys filling in the census on behalf of their children and putting them down as Catholic regardless of the young person actual stance on religion. Last census we had reports on here of parents changing what their children had put down, putting them down as RCC even though their child had told them not to, that kind of thing.
When asked how they would characterise their belief in God, only 37.5% state that they believe in God with the top response at 41.5% being that students are unsure if there is a God
Only 13.7% follow a religion due to a strong faith.
Corkfeen wrote: » I was told to stay in a different house the day the census was filled out.
Sarky wrote: » I've lived away from home since 1999, I'm fully employed and self-sufficient, and my mother still gets more concerned over what I'm wearing than any spiritual wellbeing.
Kiwi in IE wrote: » Everybody is agnostic. There is not a person who has lived or who is currently living who knows with 100% certainty whether the is definitely a god. Religious people HOPE there is a god, but that is all it is, hope. They have no special knowledge of the definite existence of a diety that the rest of us are not privy to. Hope and belief are entirely different from factual knowledge.
Zillah wrote: » That raises an interesting conundrum. Does gnosticism refer to one's stated position or one's objective position? Some people will claim to know there is a God, they are taking a gnostic position in relation to God...can we say that they are not gnostic because we maintain they do not, in fact, have such knowledge?
Kiwi in IE wrote: » Hope and belief are entirely different from factual knowledge.
mickrock wrote: » What factual knowledge do atheists have about, for example, how life could have originated by accident from inorganic matter and how DNA could have come about? None, just hope and belief that one day it'll all be figured out. They have faith in the fairy tale that chance and physical laws will be adequate explanations.