Some people love to believe that as long as we keep getting smarter, religious beliefs will diminish. In fact, that's exactly what James Leuba, an atheist scholar, believed in 1914. Upon a study he conducted, it was discovered that, amazingly (for that time), only about 40% of scientists believed in some form of religion. Leuba predicted that as scientific knowledge grows, religious beliefs will eventually vanish.
In recent years, studies have been conducted that paralleled Leuba's, to see if his prediction was correct. The results were nearly identical to Leuba's. This is a bad thing for people who think science is somehow destroying religion.
After almost 100 years, amazingly (for this time), nearly forty percent of scientists believe in God. That belief seems to hinge greatly on their respective areas of expertise--Physicists are not likely to believe in God, while mathematicians are more likely to believe.
An excerpt from this article:
"The authors of that article set out to determine whether the atheistic trend in science had increased or not. They repeated the questions of the 1914 poll to the same level of scientists and discovered that today there are still 40% of scientists who believe in God. They conclude, "scientists today no more jettison Christianity's 'two cardinal beliefs' than their counterparts did in 1914. Gallup surveys suggest the same about the general population."
From Discovery.com:
The new poll proved that widespread education did not destroy the need to believe in a greater force. . . In fact, the only major shift occurred among scientific disciplines.
In Leuba's day, biologists showed the highest rate of disbelief (69.5 per cent). "That ranking is now given to physicists/astronomers (77.9 per cent).
Mathematicians, who were the most inclined to believe in God, (44.6 per cent) remained consistent over time.
I highly recommend those links be read (the discovery one is about ten years old, so it may be off by a few margins).
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