How Different Racial and Gender Groups View the Science and Religion of the Human Body

2020-2023

scientist in a lab
Co-PI: Andrea Henderson-Platt (University of South Carolina)
Funded By:
Topic Areas: Religion and Science; Medicine

How do people understand the boundaries between science and religion with regards to the human body? How might that change during the course of the life cycle and across different racial and socioeconomic backgrounds?

Sociological work on what contemporary people think abut the relationship between religion and science has typically centered on the implications of science for religious understandings of who God is and the authority of the divine (ie evolution; big bang). But the new terrain of debate about religion and science among contemporary people is the human body. Historically, religion has held the grip of morality related to the human body are a place where science intervenes and eve seems to replace religious thinking, due to the advancement of medical technologies involving fertility and the embryo, advances in brain science to address mental illness, and interventions designed to address aging and prolong life.

It is in these areas, specifically, where we might flip the secularization narrative to ask not how science is overtaking religion with relationship to the human body, but to ask contemporary people where they think science ends and religion remains strong.

This nationally representative survey of 2,000 and 60 follow-up interviews investigate how people, both religious and non-religious, as well as medical professionals and religious leaders, understand the boundaries between religion and science in four key areas related to the human body:

  1. beginning of life and fertility technologies
  2. mental health and illness
  3. aging
  4. conceptions of death and dying

Additionally, this study analyzes how people view the relationships among science, religion, and the body at different points in the life course and across different racial and socioeconomic backgrounds.

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