Cognitive Styles and Religion

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Date

2021

Authors

Yılmaz, Onurcan

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier B.V.

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

No

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No
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Top 10%
Influence
Average
Popularity
Top 10%

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Abstract

I discuss recent research suggesting that individual differences in cognitive style give rise to and explain religious and related supernatural and paranormal beliefs. To do so, I illustrate intuitive cognitive biases (e.g., anthropomorphism) underlying these beliefs and then review the accumulated evidence indicating that non-believers are more open-minded, reflective, and less susceptible to holding epistemically suspect beliefs (e.g., conspiracy theories) on average than those who believe in supernatural events or paranormal experiences such as astrology or magic. However, seeing religion as a search for truth positively predicts reasoning performance. Although these findings are robust across diverse measures, evidence for a causal relationship remains mixed. Stronger and more precise manipulations and cross-cultural investigations are needed.

Description

Keywords

Religion, Thinking, Cognition, Humans, Problem Solving, Personality

Fields of Science

05 social sciences, 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Q1
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OpenCitations Citation Count
21

Source

Current Opinion in Psychology

Volume

40

Issue

40

Start Page

150

End Page

154
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Citations

CrossRef : 20

Scopus : 23

PubMed : 4

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 65

SCOPUS™ Citations

23

checked on Feb 12, 2026

Web of Science™ Citations

21

checked on Feb 12, 2026

Page Views

6

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Downloads

331

checked on Feb 12, 2026

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1.7362591

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