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Antireligion
Antireligion
from Wikipedia

Antireligion is opposition to religion or traditional religious beliefs and practices.[1][2][3] It involves opposition to organized religion, religious practices or religious institutions. The term antireligion has also been used to describe opposition to specific forms of supernatural worship or practice, whether organized or not.

Antireligion is distinct from deity-specific positions such as atheism (the lack of belief in deities) and antitheism (an opposition to belief in deities); although "antireligionists" may also be atheists or antitheists. Unlike antitheism, antireligion is also against those religions that do not have deities, such as some sects of Buddhism and Jainism.

History

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Some Catholics have accused the Reformation of Martin Luther as having inspired anti religiosity.[4] Early anti religious tendencies were expressed by skeptics such as Christopher Marlowe.[5] Significant antireligion was advanced during the Age of Enlightenment, as early as the 17th century. Baron d'Holbach's book Christianity Unveiled, published in 1766, attacked not only Christianity but religion in general as an impediment to the moral advancement of humanity. According to historian Michael Burleigh, antireligion found its first mass expression of barbarity in revolutionary France as "organised ... irreligion...an 'anti-clerical' and self-styled 'non-religious' state" responded violently to religious influence over society.[6]

State atheism

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Soviet Union

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The Soviet Union adopted the political ideology of Marxism–Leninism and by extension the policy of state atheism, which opposed the growth of religions.[7] It directed varying degrees of antireligious efforts at varying faiths, depending on what threat they posed to the Soviet state, and their willingness to subordinate themselves to political authority. In the 1930s, during the Stalinist period, the government destroyed church buildings or put them into secular use (as museums of religion and atheism, clubs or storage facilities), executed clergy, prohibited the publication of most religious material and persecuted some members of religious groups.[8] Less violent attempts to reduce or eliminate the influence of religion in society were also carried out at other times in Soviet history. For instance, it was usually necessary to be an atheist in order to acquire any important political position or any prestigious scientific job; thus, many people became atheists in order to advance their careers. Some estimate that 12–15 million Christians were killed in the Soviet Union.[9][10][11] Up to 500,000 Russian Orthodox Christians were persecuted by the Soviet government, not including other religious groups.[12] At least 106,300 Russian clergymen were executed between 1937 and 1941.[13] The Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic targeted numerous clergy for arrest and interrogation as enemies of the state,[14] and many churches, mosques, and synagogues were converted to secular uses.[15]

Albania

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The People's Republic of Albania had an objective for the eventual elimination of all religion in Albania with the goal of creating an atheist nation, which it declared it had achieved in 1967. In 1976, Albania implemented a constitutional ban on religious activity and actively promoted atheism.[16][17] The government nationalized most property of religious institutions and used it for non-religious purposes, such as cultural centers for young people. Religious literature was banned. Many clergy and theists were tried, tortured, and executed. All foreign Roman Catholic clergy were expelled in 1946,[citation needed] and Albania officially tried to eradicate religion.[17]

Romania

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Authorities in the People's Republic of Romania aimed to move towards an atheistic society, in which religion would be considered as the ideology of the bourgeoisie; the régime also set to propagate among the laboring masses in science, politics and culture to help them fight superstition and mysticism, and initiated an anti-religious campaign aimed at reducing the influence of religion in society.[18] After the communist takeover in 1948, some church personnel were imprisoned for political crimes.[19]

Cambodia

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The Khmer Rouge attempted to eliminate Cambodia's cultural heritage, including its religions, particularly Theravada Buddhism.[20] Over the four years of Khmer Rouge rule, at least 1.5 million Cambodians perished. Of the sixty thousand Buddhist monks that previously existed, only three thousand survived the Cambodian genocide.[21][22]

Notable antireligious people

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Philosophers

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  • Al-Ma'arri (973–1057), Arab philosopher, poet and writer.[23]
  • Thomas Paine (1737–1809), British-American writer and deist who wrote a scathing critique on religion in The Age of Reason (1793–94): "All national institutions of churches, whether Jewish, Christian, or Turkish [i.e. Muslim], appear to me no other than human inventions set up to terrify and enslave mankind, and monopolize power and profit."[citation needed]
  • Karl Marx (1818–1883), German philosopher, social scientist, socialist. He said "religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people. The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is the demand for their real happiness. To call on them to give up their illusions about their condition is to call on them to give up a condition that requires illusions. The criticism of religion is, therefore, in embryo, the criticism of that vale of tears of which religion is the halo. The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is the demand for their real happiness."[24]
  • John Dewey (1859–1952), an American pragmatist philosopher, who believed neither religion nor metaphysics could provide legitimate moral or social values, though scientific empiricism could (see science of morality).[25]
  • Bertrand Russell (1872–1970), English logician and philosopher who believed that authentic philosophy could only be pursued given an atheistic foundation of "unyielding despair". In 1948, he famously debated with the Jesuit priest and philosophical historian Father Frederick Copleston on the existence of God.[26]
  • Ayn Rand (1905–1982), Russian-American novelist and philosopher, founder of Objectivism.[27]
  • Rajneesh (born Chandra Mohan Jain; 11 December 1931 – 19 January 1990), also known as Acharya Rajneesh, Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, and later as Osho, was an Indian Godman, philosopher, mystic, and founder of the Rajneesh movement. He was viewed as a controversial new religious movement leader during his life. He rejected institutional religions, Rajneesh said that spiritual experience could not be organized into any one system of religious dogma.
  • Richard Dawkins (born 1941), English biologist, one of the "Four Horsemen" of New Atheism. He wrote The God Delusion, criticizing belief in the divine, in 2006.[28]
  • Christopher Hitchens (1949–2011), English-American author and journalist, one of the "Four Horsemen" of New Atheism. He wrote God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything in 2007.[29]
  • Lawrence M. Krauss (born 1954), a theoretical physicist, author of A Universe from Nothing.[citation needed]
  • Steven Pinker (born 1954), Canadian-American cognitive scientist who believes religion incites violence.[30]
  • Sam Harris (born 1967), author of The End of Faith. He said, "If I could wave a magic wand and get rid of either rape or religion, I would not hesitate to get rid of religion."[31]

Politicians

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  • Vladimir Lenin (1870–1924), Soviet leader from 1917 until 1924, who believed all religions to be "the organs of bourgeois reaction, used for the protection of the exploitation and the stupefaction of the working class".[32]
  • Jawaharlal Nehru (1889-1964), first prime minister of India who said "The spectacle of what is called religion, or at any rate organised religion, in India and elsewhere, has filled me with horror and I have frequently condemned it ...." in his autobiography.
  • Nikita Khrushchev (1894–1971), Soviet leader in 1953–1964, who initiated, among other measures,[33][34] the 1958–1964 Soviet anti-religious campaign.
  • Plutarco Elías Calles (1877–1945), president of Mexico between 1924 and 1928. During his government the Cristero War began.[35]
  • Joseph Stalin (18 December 1878 – 5 March 1953), while he was the leader of the USSR he worked on ending religion in the country.[36]
  • Enver Hoxha (1908–1985), leader of Albania who described himself as an "Arch atheist" and sought to eradicate religion in his country, going as far as to ban religiously based names.

Others

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Antireligion denotes opposition to , particularly hostility toward organized religious institutions, beliefs, and practices, often advocating for their reduction or elimination from . Distinct from , which involves disbelief in deities without prescriptive action against , antireligion entails to undermine religious and influence, sometimes extending to state-enforced . Historically, antireligion emerged in radical critiques during the Enlightenment, where select thinkers challenged religious dogma as incompatible with reason, though most contemporaries sought reform rather than wholesale rejection. It achieved mass application in the French Revolution's dechristianization campaigns, including the 1793 law promoting atheistic cults like the to supplant , resulting in church closures, clergy executions, and forced renunciation of faith. Similar policies intensified under Soviet communism, where antireligious and decrees from 1918 onward disestablished churches, persecuted , and aimed to eradicate religion as an opiate of the masses, shuttering thousands of religious sites and imprisoning or killing leaders. While philosophical antireligion emphasizes empirical and causal explanations over claims, its political implementations have sparked controversies over , with empirical records showing correlations between state antireligion and suppression of , including against believers, rather than voluntary secular progress. Proponents, from Enlightenment materialists to Marxist theorists, argue it fosters rational inquiry, yet defining characteristics include tension with individual freedoms, as evidenced by historical backlashes and incomplete eradications of despite aggressive campaigns.

Definitions and Distinctions

Core Definition and Scope

Antireligion refers to opposition to religion, encompassing rejection of its doctrines, rituals, and institutions as irrational or harmful to human welfare. This stance prioritizes empirical reasoning and secular frameworks over faith-based claims, often arguing that religious adherence perpetuates dogma that conflicts with and individual . Unlike neutral nonbelief, antireligion implies an active critique, positing that religion's causal role in historical conflicts—such as the (1095–1291), which resulted in an estimated 1–3 million deaths—or suppression of inquiry, as in the (1633), justifies efforts to curtail its influence. The scope of antireligion extends to both individual intellectual positions and collective movements, targeting not only assertions but also the social structures they sustain, including clerical authority and moral prescriptions derived from scripture. It manifests in philosophical deconstructions, such as those emphasizing 's failure to meet evidentiary standards akin to in science, and in policy advocacy for disestablishment, where state entanglement with is seen as enabling , as evidenced by data showing higher correlating with lower scientific output in some nations (e.g., a 2015 study finding inverse relationships between and patents per capita across 137 countries). Antireligion does not necessitate , as one could oppose religious institutions on pragmatic grounds while acknowledging unprovable metaphysical possibilities, though empirical overlaps exist given 's typical reliance on theistic premises. In practice, antireligion's breadth includes critiques of religion's role in perpetuating inequality, such as hierarchies documented in scriptural interpretations across Abrahamic faiths, where women faced legal subordination until secular reforms (e.g., Saudi women's driving ban lifted in after decades of religious justification). This positions antireligion as a causal realist response, attributing societal ills to religion's insulation from disconfirmation rather than inherent malice, with proponents citing longitudinal data like the decline in violence post-Enlightenment (e.g., Steven Pinker's analysis showing per capita battle deaths dropping from 500 per 100,000 in the 1400s to under 1 by 2000). Such views underscore antireligion's focus on verifiable outcomes over deference to tradition.

Differentiation from Atheism, Antitheism, and Irreligion

Antireligion constitutes opposition to or traditional religious beliefs and practices, encompassing a stance against irrespective of its theistic elements. This position involves active rejection of religious institutions, rituals, and doctrines, often viewing them as detrimental to societal progress or individual rationality. In contrast, atheism denotes the absence of belief in deities, defined as the psychological state of not holding that gods exist, without inherently requiring opposition to religious structures or cultural expressions of . An atheist may lack belief in entities yet remain neutral toward or even engage with religious traditions on non-belief grounds, such as ethical or communal aspects, distinguishing it from antireligion's broader institutional critique. Antitheism differs by focusing on opposition to theism—belief in a personal, omnipotent —often framed as a revolt against such conceptions rather than writ large. While overlapping in critique of theistic doctrines, may spare non-theistic religious systems, whereas antireligion extends hostility to any formalized religious practice, including those without deities like certain Buddhist sects. Irreligion, meanwhile, refers to the absence or indifference toward religious beliefs and practices, potentially including passive non-adherence without advocacy for eradication. Scholars note that can manifest as mere disaffiliation or apathy, lacking the proactive confrontation characteristic of antireligion, which seeks to undermine religious influence through argumentation or policy. Thus, an irreligious person might simply forgo worship without challenging its societal role, highlighting antireligion's activist dimension.

Philosophical Foundations

Core Arguments Against Religion

One primary argument against religion posits that the existence of gratuitous and in the world is incompatible with the traditional conception of deities as omnipotent, omniscient, and omnibenevolent, particularly in monotheistic traditions. Known as the logical problem of evil, this contention holds that an all-powerful and all-good being would prevent unnecessary instances of intense , yet empirical observations reveal such evils persist without discernible justification, rendering the coexistence of such a and observed reality logically inconsistent. A related evidential variant argues that the sheer volume and distribution of natural and moral evils—such as widespread diseases, claiming millions of lives annually (e.g., over 60,000 deaths from earthquakes in 2023 alone), and human atrocities—provide strong inductive evidence against the probability of an omnipotent, benevolent deity's existence, as these phenomena occur without apparent divine intervention or purpose. The argument from divine hiddenness contends that if a perfectly loving existed who desired a relationship with finite beings, of divine would be sufficiently clear and accessible to all non-resistant individuals, yet the absence of such compelling, non-ambiguous manifestations—evidenced by diverse non-belief across cultures and the lack of universally persuasive or revelations—suggests no such entity exists. Empirically, the failure of religious claims to produce falsifiable, repeatable evidence undermines their validity; for instance, intercessory prayer studies, such as the 2006 STEP project involving 1,802 cardiac bypass patients, found no statistically significant health benefits from prayed-for groups compared to controls, contradicting intervention hypotheses. Scientific naturalism further erodes religious supernaturalism by demonstrating that phenomena once attributed to divine action—such as the origins of species via , as evidenced by records spanning 3.5 billion years and genetic homologies shared across taxa—are adequately explained through naturalistic mechanisms without invoking unobservable entities. Cosmological processes, including the model supported by radiation data from satellites like Planck (measuring fluctuations to 1 part in 100,000), align with quantum fluctuations and rather than requiring a initiator, rendering religious creation narratives superfluous. Critics of also highlight internal inconsistencies, such as mutually exclusive truth claims among major faiths (e.g., Christianity's exclusive salvation through versus Islam's through ), which cannot all be true and collectively lack empirical corroboration beyond anecdotal testimony. These arguments collectively challenge religion's epistemological foundations by prioritizing observable data and parsimonious explanations over faith-based assertions, though proponents of religion counter with appeals to mystery, , or greater goods, which antireligionists deem and insufficiently evidentiary.

Historical Thinkers and Texts

(341–270 BCE), the Greek philosopher, laid foundational critiques of religious superstition by positing a materialist where atoms and void explain natural phenomena, rendering divine intervention unnecessary. He argued that gods, if they exist, reside in distant intermundia and remain unconcerned with human affairs, thus eliminating the basis for religious fear, rituals, and priestly authority that exploit such anxieties. Epicurus's Letter to emphasizes achieving ataraxia through understanding nature, dismissing terrors and divine punishments as fabrications that perpetuate misery. Titus Lucretius Carus (c. 99–55 BCE), a Roman Epicurean poet, expanded these ideas in his epic poem (On the Nature of Things), composed around 55 BCE, which systematically dismantles religious myths by promoting and denying providence. Lucretius portrays religion as a source of societal harm, citing human sacrifices to appease imagined gods and arguing that superstitious fears inhibit scientific inquiry into causes like , formerly attributed to Jupiter's wrath. The text urges liberation from —binding devotion—through Epicurean physics, asserting that death is annihilation, not judgment, to end priest-induced dread. In the Enlightenment, Paul-Henri Thiry, Baron d'Holbach (1723–1789), advanced explicit antireligion in Christianity Unveiled (1761), an anonymous treatise denouncing as a system of errors founded on ignorance and fear, productive of , wars, and moral hypocrisy. Drawing on , d'Holbach contended that religious doctrines invert cause and effect, attributing natural events to caprice while ignoring empirical laws, and he called for replacing with reason to foster human progress. His System of Nature (1770) further equated god-concepts with anthropomorphic projections, arguing they obstruct enlightenment by discouraging scrutiny of the universe's mechanical operations. Voltaire (1694–1778), while a deist affirming a distant creator, mounted vigorous attacks on organized religion's abuses in works like the Philosophical Dictionary (1764), where entries ridicule biblical inconsistencies, clerical corruption, and intolerance, such as the Inquisition's brutality. He viewed religion as tolerable only if stripped of dogma and power, famously declaring "écrasez l'infâme" against superstition's societal harms, evidenced by events like the 1762 Calas affair, where Protestant Jean Calas was wrongly executed for alleged infanticide amid Catholic prejudice. Voltaire's critiques targeted causal distortions, like miracles defying observed natural regularity, prioritizing evidence over revelation. David Hume (1711–1776) contributed skeptical analyses in (1779, posthumous) and The Natural History of Religion (1757), portraying religious belief as originating from human passions like fear and hope rather than reason, evolving from polytheism's crude to monotheism's refined yet equally unfounded . Hume dissected teleological arguments, questioning design inferences from order amid evident disorder, such as animal suffering incompatible with benevolent divinity, and dismissed as violations of uniform experience, unsupported by testimony outweighing natural laws. His demanded verifiable causation, deeming religious claims speculative fictions perpetuating division. Thomas Paine (1737–1809), in The Age of Reason (1794), critiqued scriptural authority by enumerating contradictions and immoralities in the Bible, such as Genesis's dual creation accounts and commands for , arguing these texts reflect human fabrication rather than . As a deist, Paine advocated via reason and science over institutional creeds, which he saw as engines of priestcraft exploiting credulity; he cited historical forgeries like the Old Testament's patchwork composition, evidenced by anachronisms, to urge rejection of in favor of observable creation's deistic clockwork.

Historical Development

Ancient and Pre-Modern Roots

In , of Colophon (c. 570–475 BCE) articulated early criticisms of traditional polytheistic by rejecting the anthropomorphic depictions of s in Homeric and Hesiodic , arguing that mortals project flaws, forms, and behaviors onto the divine, such as gods engaging in theft, adultery, and deceit. He posited a singular, non-anthropomorphic characterized by immobility, perfect thought, and sensory perception without organs, marking one of the first systematic theological critiques while emphasizing the limits of about the divine. extended his skepticism to religious practices, repudiating , oracles, and sacrificial customs as unfounded, though he retained belief in divine oversight of the . Epicurean philosophy, founded by (341–270 BCE), further challenged religious superstition by promoting atomistic materialism, which explained natural phenomena through mechanical causes rather than divine intervention or providence. acknowledged the existence of gods as blissful, self-sufficient beings residing in the void between worlds, but denied their involvement in human affairs, attributing fears of death and punishment to irrational religious myths that Epicureans sought to dispel through reasoned understanding of nature. This materialist framework, later propagated by in (c. 55 BCE), aimed to liberate individuals from religio-induced anxiety by demonstrating that the universe operates independently of capricious deities. In ancient , the (or Lokayata) school, emerging around 600 BCE, represented a materialist tradition that explicitly rejected Vedic authority, supernatural entities, karma, and doctrines, advocating perception as the sole valid and hedonistic grounded in empirical reality. Charvakas dismissed religious rituals as priestly deceptions for material gain, asserting that arises from the body like intoxication from fermented ingredients, with no enduring or divine realm persisting after . This heterodox stance positioned Charvaka as an early form of atheistic critique within , though its texts survive only in fragments quoted by opponents, highlighting its marginalization by orthodox traditions. Pre-modern European thought featured sporadic skepticism toward ecclesiastical dogma, but overt antireligion remained rare amid dominant Christian orthodoxy; medieval figures like (c. 1287–1347) employed nominalist reasoning to question unsubstantiated miracles and theological excesses, prioritizing empirical simplicity over complex divine explanations. Instances of doubt surfaced in heretical movements and clandestine writings, such as those denying or , yet these were typically suppressed rather than systematized into broad opposition to religion itself, reflecting institutional constraints on public expression.

Enlightenment and 19th-Century Advances

The Enlightenment era marked a pivotal shift toward rational inquiry that challenged religious authority, with thinkers employing empirical observation and logical analysis to critique and . Paul-Henri Thiry, , articulated a comprehensive materialist in The System of Nature (1770), positing that the universe operates solely through natural laws without divine intervention and that religion perpetuates ignorance and moral error by fabricating explanations for observable phenomena. advanced against theistic proofs in (1779), using dialogues to dismantle teleological arguments from design, highlighting their reliance on anthropomorphic analogies rather than verifiable causation. These works exemplified a causal realism prioritizing observable mechanisms over faith-based assertions, though mainstream academic narratives often downplay their radicalism due to institutional preferences for moderated interpretations of Enlightenment thought. Voltaire, operating from a deist standpoint, focused his antireligious efforts on combating clerical intolerance and institutional abuses, as evidenced in his Philosophical Dictionary entries and campaigns against events like the 1762 Calas affair, where he exposed judicial miscarriages tied to religious prejudice. His critiques targeted the causal role of in fostering and suppressing , arguing that priestly power derived not from truth but from exploiting human fears of the unknown. Such arguments contributed to broader societal advances, including the circulation of clandestine antireligious texts in , which eroded ecclesiastical influence amid rising literacy rates from 20% in 1700 to over 40% by in urban areas. In the , philosophical deepened these critiques by reframing religion as a construct rooted in alienation rather than . Ludwig Feuerbach's (1841) contended that theological concepts invert subject and predicate, with divine attributes as idealized projections of capacities, thereby reducing religious belief to an anthropological error amenable to empirical dissolution. extended this in his Contribution to the Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right (1843–1844), famously declaring religion the "" as a symptom of material deprivation that consoles the oppressed while obscuring class antagonisms, urging its transcendence through socioeconomic reform rather than mere intellectual refutation. Empirical sciences further undermined scriptural literalism; Charles Darwin's (1859) demonstrated species variation through , providing a mechanism-based alternative to creation narratives that aligned with fossil records and biogeographical data accumulated since the 1830s voyage. These developments fostered secular organizations, such as Britain's founded in 1866, reflecting quantifiable growth in amid industrialization's disruption of traditional communities.

20th-Century Institutionalization

The publication of the in represented a pivotal formal articulation of antireligious principles, drafted primarily by philosopher Roy Wood Sellars and editor Raymond Bragg, and endorsed by 34 intellectuals including and Edwin Embree. This document rejected supernaturalism, theistic , and , positing instead a naturalistic grounded in science, reason, and to guide human affairs. It explicitly positioned as a substitute for traditional , advocating the elimination of religious dogma from , , and , thereby institutionalizing antireligion as an organized movement in the United States. Building on this foundation, dedicated organizations proliferated to advance antireligious agendas through advocacy, litigation, and public education. The , established in 1941, formalized efforts to promote and challenge religious privileges, influencing policy debates on issues like church-state separation. In 1963, founded , which pursued aggressive legal action against religious observances in public institutions, including the landmark Murray v. Curlett case contributing to the 1963 ban on . The , formed in 1976 by and her mother , further institutionalized opposition by monitoring and contesting religious endorsements by government entities, growing to represent thousands of nontheists by century's end. Internationally, the International Humanist and Ethical Union—now —was created in 1952 to coordinate non-state groups across 30 countries, fostering global campaigns against religious influence in governance and education. Antireligion also embedded itself in educational institutions, particularly through the of curricula and scientific discourse. Early 20th-century U.S. higher education shifted decisively after Darwinian evolution's acceptance, with universities like Harvard and Yale phasing out mandatory requirements by the 1920s and reorienting departments toward empirical methodologies that marginalized theological explanations. This process, accelerated by Scopes Trial-era debates in , institutionalized a naturalistic in , cosmology, and social sciences, where religious claims were increasingly treated as non-falsifiable and extraneous to academic rigor. By mid-century, secular humanist principles permeated teacher training and public schooling, evident in the adoption of value-neutral ethics courses that critiqued religious moral frameworks as outdated. These developments, while not uniformly hostile, effectively normalized antireligious presuppositions in knowledge production, contributing to declining religious adherence among educated elites.

State-Sponsored Antireligion

Soviet Union Implementation

The 's implementation of antireligion began immediately after the Bolshevik Revolution, with Vladimir Lenin's Decree on the Separation of Church from State and School, issued on January 23, 1918, which nationalized church property, prohibited in schools, and ended state funding for religious institutions. This laid the groundwork for systematic suppression, including the confiscation of valuables from the during the 1921–1922 relief campaign, which led to trials and executions of , such as the sentencing of Metropolitan Veniamin of Petrograd to in 1922 for resisting the seizures. Under Lenin, theological schools were closed, church publications banned, and nearly all Orthodox faced shooting, imprisonment in labor camps, or harassment, targeting the church as the primary institution due to its vast network of over 50,000 parishes pre-1917. Joseph Stalin escalated these efforts during the late 1920s and 1930s as part of the First Five-Year Plan's "Godless Five-Year Plan" launched in 1928, which aimed to eradicate religion through coordinated , closures, and purges. By 1939, only about 200 to 500 Orthodox churches remained open across the , down from approximately 46,000–50,000 before the revolution, with many repurposed as warehouses, museums of , or demolished. Thousands of priests and religious leaders were executed or sent to camps, leaving only four Orthodox bishops free by 1939; synagogues and mosques faced similar shuttering and conversions. The , founded in 1925 and peaking at millions of members by the early 1930s, played a central role by organizing lectures, demonstrations, and publications to propagandize scientific and dismantle religious practices, though it operated under oversight and declined after 1947. World War II prompted a temporary relaxation in 1941, when revived the to bolster national morale, allowing reopening of churches and elevating Patriarch Sergius, which expanded to around 22,000 active parishes by 1957. However, renewed the campaign from 1959 to 1964, closing approximately 12,000 churches—reducing Orthodox parishes from 13,325 in 1959 to 7,600 by 1964—through deregistration, bureaucratic harassment, and replacement of clergy with state-aligned figures often linked to the . Enforcement mechanisms included anti-religious in media and education, surveillance of believers, and legal restrictions under the 1929 Law on Religious Associations, which limited worship to registered groups and prohibited evangelism or charity work. These policies persisted with varying intensity until the Soviet collapse, reflecting a Marxist commitment to religion as an opiate impeding proletarian consciousness, though empirical religiosity endured underground despite the state's coercive apparatus.

Other Regimes: Albania, Cambodia, and Beyond

In Albania, under Enver Hoxha's communist regime from 1944 to 1985, state atheism was enforced with unparalleled intensity, culminating in the 1976 constitution declaring the country the world's first officially atheist state. Hoxha's 1967 campaign against religion led to the closure of all 2,169 religious institutions, including mosques, churches, and monasteries, which were repurposed for secular uses or demolished. Clergy faced imprisonment, execution, or forced labor; by the regime's end, thousands of religious figures had been persecuted, with estimates of over 100 executions directly tied to antireligious policies. The constitution's Article 37 explicitly stated that the state "recognizes no religion whatever and supports and develops atheist propaganda for the purpose of spreading the scientific materialist world outlook." In , the under from 1975 to 1979 pursued radical antireligious measures as part of eradicating "old" societal elements to build a classless agrarian . , the dominant faith, was labeled reactionary and systematically targeted: of approximately 70,000 monks, only about 2,000 survived, with most executed, starved, or forced into labor after . Roughly 95% of the nation's Buddhist temples were damaged or destroyed, and religious texts, artifacts, and practices were prohibited to prevent any ideological competition with the regime's Maoist-inspired . These policies contributed to the deaths of 1.5 to 2 million people overall, including targeted religious minorities like Cham and . Beyond these cases, similar state-sponsored antireligion appeared in other communist regimes. In during Mao Zedong's (1966–1976), religious institutions were assaulted as feudal remnants; temples, churches, and mosques were razed or converted, with millions of believers persecuted through Red Guard campaigns that banned open practice and promoted via . , under the Kim dynasty since 1948, maintains official through ideology, which deifies the leadership while suppressing religion; possession of religious materials can result in execution or labor camps, with Christians facing the harshest penalties in a system where practice is deemed treasonous. These efforts, like Albania's and Cambodia's, prioritized ideological purity but often failed to eradicate private belief, leading to underground persistence amid coercion.

Mechanisms of Enforcement and Suppression

In the , enforcement of involved the closure of over 80,000 churches between 1917 and 1941, alongside the execution or imprisonment of tens of thousands of clergy and believers, particularly during Stalin's purges in . Propaganda campaigns, including widespread publication of anti-religious literature and media, were deployed to indoctrinate the population, with organizations like the League of Militant Atheists mobilizing millions to ridicule and dismantle religious practices by the late 1920s. Legal measures, such as the 1929 Law on Religious Associations, restricted religious activities to worship only, prohibiting education, charity, or property ownership, while surveillance ensured compliance through arrests for "." Under Enver Hoxha's regime in , declared the world's first atheist state in , suppression tactics included the demolition of nearly all 2,169 religious buildings by , including mosques, churches, and monasteries, and the execution or imprisonment of hundreds of clergy. Private religious observance was criminalized under Article 55 of the 1976 constitution, punishable by labor camps or death, with enforcing bans on rituals like or through informant networks and forced renunciations of . The in (1975–1979) targeted religious institutions as part of eradicating perceived bourgeois and foreign influences, forcibly defrocking over 60,000 Buddhist monks and converting temples into prisons or execution sites, resulting in the deaths of up to 90% of the monkhood. Enforcement relied on mass relocations to agrarian communes where religious practice was forbidden, combined with executions of Muslim Cham leaders and destruction of Qurans to suppress Islamic identity, framing religion as counterrevolutionary. In Maoist China during the (1966–1976), mechanisms included the "Smash the " campaign, which led to the destruction of thousands of temples, mosques, and churches, alongside public humiliations and killings of religious practitioners to enforce ideological purity. , mobilized youth squads, conducted raids on religious sites, while state policies banned unsupervised worship and required loyalty oaths rejecting supernatural beliefs, sustained by pervasive propaganda equating with . Across these regimes, common tactics encompassed not only physical destruction and punitive laws but also psychological via reeducation camps and state-controlled education systems that promoted scientific from onward, aiming to sever intergenerational transmission of . Such measures often prioritized over voluntary persuasion, with enforcement varying by regime intensity—peaking under , Hoxha, and —but consistently involving oversight to detect and eliminate clandestine practice.

Notable Figures

Philosophers and Intellectuals

(1711–1776), in works such as published posthumously in 1779, systematically critiqued arguments for God's existence, including the design argument by highlighting the problem of evil and the inadequacy of analogical reasoning from nature to a divine intelligence. He further undermined revealed religion by arguing in (1748) that testimony for miracles violates uniform experience and probabilistic reasoning, rendering religious claims unverifiable and improbable. Paul-Henri Thiry, (1723–1789), advanced explicit in The System of Nature (1770), positing a deterministic materialist governed solely by physical laws without need for intervention or a . He contended that religious beliefs arise from fear and ignorance of natural causes, leading to that hinders human progress and based on empirical observation. Ludwig Feuerbach (1804–1872) argued in (1841) that theological concepts represent anthropomorphic projections of human attributes—such as reason, love, and will—onto an imagined divine being, inverting the true essence of humanity as the origin of religious ideas. This anthropological critique framed religion as an alienating illusion that subordinates human potential to a fictional absolute. Karl Marx (1818–1883), building on materialist foundations, characterized religion in his 1843 Contribution to the Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Right as "the ," a compensatory that consoles the for earthly suffering while obscuring the need for revolutionary change against exploitative economic structures. He viewed it causally as a product of class antagonism, destined to wither in a where material conditions eliminate its social function. Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900) declared "God is dead" in (1882), diagnosing the decline of Christian belief in modern as a cultural crisis requiring the overcoming of through affirmation of life and power. He lambasted as a "slave morality" that inverts natural values, promoting weakness, resentment, and denial of earthly vitality in favor of otherworldly ideals. Bertrand Russell (1872–1970), in his 1927 lecture "Why I Am Not a Christian," rejected for lacking against alternatives like a finite temporal and criticized religious doctrines for fostering , , and opposition to scientific inquiry. He emphasized religion's historical role in justifying intolerance and intellectual stagnation, advocating rational ethics independent of supernatural authority.

Political Leaders and Revolutionaries

Vladimir Lenin, as leader of following the of 1917, regarded religion as a superstitious hindrance to proletarian consciousness and scientific materialism, drawing from Marxist critiques that portrayed it as an "opiate of the masses." His administration enacted the in January 1918, which nationalized church lands, ended state funding for religious institutions, and prohibited in schools, effectively subordinating religious expression to state oversight. These measures laid the groundwork for militant atheism, culminating in the establishment of the League of Militant Atheists in 1925, which organized widespread against religious "" and targeted clerical influence in society. Joseph Stalin escalated antireligious efforts during the late 1920s and 1930s as part of collectivization and the , viewing faith as incompatible with the creation of a "new socialist man" unburdened by ideological rivals to Marxism-Leninism. Between 1929 and 1941, his regime shuttered approximately 90% of Orthodox churches—reducing operational ones from over 50,000 in 1917 to fewer than 500 by 1939—and executed or imprisoned tens of thousands of and believers, framing as a counterrevolutionary force allied with class enemies. Stalin's 1936 constitution nominally guaranteed freedom of conscience but in practice enforced through the destruction of religious sites, confiscation of icons, and indoctrination campaigns that equated piety with sabotage. Mao Zedong integrated antireligion into his vision of perpetual revolution, particularly during the Cultural Revolution from 1966 to 1976, where religion was condemned as one of the "Four Olds" (customs, culture, habits, and ideas) obstructing communist purity. Red Guards demolished thousands of temples, mosques, and churches, while millions of believers faced public humiliation, forced labor, or execution; Buddhist and Taoist sites suffered extensive destruction, with estimates of over 6,000 monasteries razed in Tibet alone. Mao's policies subordinated surviving religious groups to the state via patriotic associations, ensuring their alignment with party doctrine over independent practice. Enver Hoxha, ruler of from 1944 to 1985, pursued the most explicit , declaring in 1967 that was the world's first atheist nation and embedding this in the 1976 constitution, which banned all religious rituals, institutions, and symbols under penalty of imprisonment or death. Hoxha's regime demolished over 2,000 mosques, churches, and monasteries, executed or persecuted thousands of , and prohibited even private prayer, rationalizing it as essential to eradicate "bourgeois" feudal remnants and foster self-reliance. This campaign, enforced by the , persisted until Hoxha's death, though underground faith endured despite surveillance. Pol Pot, leader of the Khmer Rouge from 1975 to 1979, implemented an agrarian communist utopia in Democratic Kampuchea that systematically eradicated as a vestige of pre-revolutionary society, defrocking nearly all of Cambodia's 60,000 Buddhist monks and converting pagodas into prisons or execution sites. The regime killed an estimated 25,000 clergy and destroyed religious artifacts, equating monastic life with on the peasantry and prioritizing ideological purity over spiritual traditions rooted in Theravada . Khmer Rouge policies extended suppression to and , forcing survivors into labor camps where antireligious indoctrination reinforced the party's atheistic Maoist framework.

Modern Activists and Public Intellectuals

Richard Dawkins, an evolutionary biologist and emeritus professor at Oxford University, emerged as a leading voice in modern antireligion through his 2006 book The God Delusion, which sold over 3 million copies worldwide and argued that religious faith constitutes a harmful delusion incompatible with scientific evidence and rational inquiry. Dawkins founded the Richard Dawkins Foundation for Reason and Science in 2006 to promote atheism and secularism, funding educational initiatives and legal challenges against religious influence in public policy, such as opposition to teaching creationism in schools. In 2024, at age 83, Dawkins publicly endorsed "cultural Christianity" as a preferable alternative to multiculturalism while reaffirming his atheism, stating that Christianity's historical contributions to Western civilization outweigh those of Islam. Sam Harris, a neuroscientist and author, critiqued religion's role in fostering violence and moral relativism in his 2004 bestseller The End of Faith, which won the PEN/Martha Albrand Award for First Nonfiction and topped The New York Times bestseller list, positing that faith-based doctrines enable extremism, including the September 11, 2001, attacks. Harris co-founded the Project Reason nonprofit in 2007 to advocate for secular governance and has continued antireligion commentary via his Making Sense podcast, launched in 2013, which as of 2023 has exceeded 500 episodes discussing topics like Islamic fundamentalism's incompatibility with liberal democracy. He argues that meditation practices can replace religious spirituality without supernatural claims, drawing from his 2014 book Waking Up. Christopher Hitchens, a journalist and author who died in 2011, advanced antireligion arguments in (2007), a New York Times bestseller that contended religions promote division, , and , citing historical examples like the Catholic Church's suppression of Galileo in 1633. Hitchens participated in high-profile debates, including a 2009 event against the motion "This House Believes in God," and testified before the U.S. House of Representatives in 2007 on religion's role in totalitarian regimes. Daniel Dennett, a philosopher at who died on April 19, 2024, examined religion as a natural but evolved phenomenon in Breaking the Spell (2006), urging empirical study of its cognitive and social mechanisms to demystify its persistence, with the book influencing discussions on and . These figures, collectively dubbed the "Four Horsemen" after their 2007 online discussion viewed over 1 million times on , popularized assertive in the early 21st century, emphasizing religion's empirical disprovability and societal costs over accommodationist . Other contemporary public intellectuals include , a Harvard whose 2018 book attributes declines in violence and increases in human flourishing to secular reason and rather than religious , citing data from sources like the showing correlations between lower religiosity and higher prosperity in developed nations. Pinker argues that humanistic values, grounded in empirical progress, outperform faith-based moralities in reducing suffering.

Societal Impacts and Controversies

Purported Achievements and Claims

Proponents of state-sponsored antireligion in the claimed that campaigns against religion facilitated the creation of a "new socialist man" unburdened by superstition, thereby accelerating industrialization, scientific inquiry, and social equality. articulated this view in the , asserting that freed individuals from the "religious chains" of class oppression, enabling collective progress under . The League of Militant Godless, formed in 1925 as a key vehicle for , expanded to millions of members by the early and organized lectures, publications, and events to debunk religious doctrines, which officials presented as evidence of mass ideological conversion. These efforts included the "atheist five-year plan" from 1932 to 1937, aimed at eradicating religious expression through closures of religious sites and mandatory scientific ; authorities touted the resulting decline in visible religious practice—such as the reduction of active Orthodox parishes from over 50,000 pre-1917 to fewer than 1,000 by 1939—as a triumph over backward influences impeding modernization. In under , similar policies from 1967 declared the state the world's first atheist nation, with claims of total elimination of religious institutions fostering undivided loyalty to the regime and unhindered socialist development. Intellectual advocates of antireligion, including New Atheists like Sam Harris and Christopher Hitchens, have asserted that systematic criticism of religion reduces societal harms attributable to faith, such as religiously motivated violence and moral irrationality. Harris contended that religious faith underpins practices like suicide bombings and opposition to homosexuality, arguing that promoting atheism would mitigate these by prioritizing evidence-based reasoning over doctrinal absolutes. Hitchens similarly claimed that religion poisons societal progress, advocating Enlightenment-style rationalism to cultivate a humane civilization free from theistic dogma. Such claims extend to purported advancements in and ; for instance, antireligion proponents in communist regimes attributed literacy gains—from under 30% in Russia in to over 90% by the —to antireligious schooling that replaced instruction with materialist . Modern activists have pointed to increased in Western societies correlating with lower and purportedly higher indices of social trust and , though these are often framed as indirect outcomes of diminishing religious influence rather than direct causal effects of militant opposition.

Empirical Criticisms and Failures

Despite extensive campaigns of , , and closure of religious institutions, state-sponsored antireligion in the from 1917 to failed to eradicate religious belief, with practices persisting underground and surging post-collapse. By , surveys indicated that up to 57% of the population openly expressed to state agents despite severe risks of reprisal, underscoring the limits of coercive . The share of identifying as Orthodox Christians rose from 31% in to 72% by 2008, reflecting a rapid resurgence as restrictions lifted, contrary to the regime's goal of scientific . Academic analysis attributes this failure to the inability of forced atheistic monopolies to supplant entrenched cultural and psychological needs for transcendence, leading instead to adaptive, clandestine religiosity. In under , the 1967 constitutional ban on —the world's first official declaration of —resulted in the demolition of over 2,000 mosques and churches, execution or imprisonment of , and prohibition of rituals, yet belief endured covertly and revived dramatically after 1991. Post-regime censuses show approximately 56% identifying as Muslim and 10% as Christian by 2011, with reemerging as a marker of despite decades of militant suppression. Scholars argue that politicizing as a tool of , rather than voluntary conviction, undermined its sustainability, fostering resentment and underground networks that preserved traditions. Hoxha's policies, enforced until his death in 1985, yielded no enduring irreligiosity, instead contributing to societal isolation and without fulfilling promises of rational enlightenment. The regime in (1975–1979) targeted , the dominant faith, by defrocking and executing over 60,000 monks—nearly all ordained —and converting temples into prisons or storage, aiming to dismantle spiritual structures for agrarian . This suppression, part of a broader killing 1.5–2 million, temporarily obliterated public religion but failed to instill lasting ; post-1979 Vietnamese invasion, Buddhist institutions revived, with monasteries like Wat Bo reconstructing communities and rituals by the 1980s. Empirical accounts document how the regime's antireligious zeal exacerbated social atomization and moral disorientation, contributing to famine and purges without replacing faith with ideological loyalty, as survivors reverted to ancestral beliefs amid the power vacuum. Broader studies of communist regimes reveal empirical failures in suppressing correlating with diminished societal , including elevated unhappiness and eroded trust. In former states, where religious activities faced systematic bans, post-transition surveys link prolonged antireligion to lower compared to peers with uninterrupted practices, attributing this to unmet needs for communal meaning and ethical frameworks. Regimes often substituted state dogma for , fostering personality cults that mirrored the structures they sought to destroy, yet without the voluntary adherence that sustains belief systems. These policies incurred massive human costs—millions persecuted—while empirical data from Pew Research across shows 's reassertion as integral to identity, with 70–90% in many viewing it as culturally defining by , highlighting the futility of top-down eradication.

Comparative Outcomes in Religious vs. Antireligious Societies

Enforced antireligion in 20th-century regimes, such as the under and Maoist , yielded mixed economic results characterized by forced industrialization amid severe human costs, contrasting with outcomes in predominantly religious societies that varied by governance structure but often avoided comparable scale of repression. The , proclaiming , demolished over 90% of Orthodox churches by 1939 and executed or imprisoned approximately 100,000 during the of 1937-1938, contributing to a totalitarian system that prioritized materialist ideology over individual freedoms. This suppression facilitated rapid heavy-industry growth, with industrial output rising 14-fold from 1928 to 1940 under the Five-Year Plans, yet per capita consumption remained stagnant and famines like the (1932-1933) claimed 3.5-5 million lives due to state policies. In , the (1966-1976) destroyed thousands of temples and persecuted believers, correlating with economic disruption that halved GDP growth rates temporarily, though post-Mao reforms decoupled from strict antireligion enabled sustained expansion exceeding 9% annually from 1978 onward. Cross-national empirical data on voluntary religiosity—distinct from enforced antireligion—indicate that higher correlates with reduced and economic dynamism. A study of 188 countries found religiosity negatively associated with applications , with a one-standard-deviation increase in religiosity linked to 0.5-1 fewer patents per million people, attributing this to and emphasized in religious doctrines. Similarly, Protestant-majority societies showed positive links, but overall religiosity hindered national-level in non-Protestant contexts, as measured by global data from 1980-2010. Antireligious regimes like the USSR achieved breakthroughs (e.g., Sputnik in ) through state-directed , but systemic inefficiencies led to technological lags in consumer and computing sectors by the , with R&D declining relative to the West. Highly religious societies, such as those in (average religiosity >90%), exhibit lower rates, with patents under 1 per million versus >200 in low-religiosity . On human rights and social stability, antireligious societies demonstrated profound failures, with communist states accounting for tens of millions of deaths from purges, famines, and labor camps tied to ideological enforcement against religious "." Soviet archives reveal 20-30 million excess deaths from 1929-1953, many linked to antireligious campaigns suppressing moral alternatives to state loyalty. Religious societies under theocratic rule, like or , score poorly on indices such as (Saudi: 7/100 in 2023), with restrictions on and gender rights, yet democratic religious-majority nations like (Hindu-majority) or the pre-secular U.S. (Christian-influenced) sustained higher during growth phases. Modern low-religiosity societies (e.g., , <30% highly religious) rank highest on human development (HDI >0.95) and low corruption (CPI >85/100), suggesting voluntary fosters stability without the coercion of antireligion, though causal links remain debated amid confounders like institutions and .
MetricAntireligious Regimes (e.g., USSR 1920s-1980s, pre-1978)Predominantly Religious Societies (e.g., , avg.)
GDP Growth (peak periods)High initial (USSR: 5-6% avg. 1950-1970) but stagnation post-1970sModerate (2-4% avg.), lower (~$10k vs. global $12k)
Innovation (patents/million)State-driven highs in (e.g., USSR nuclear) but low consumerLow overall, negative correlation
Human Rights AbusesExtreme (e.g., 20M+ deaths USSR)Varies; high in theocracies, lower in democracies
Social CohesionEnforced , low trust outside stateHigher individual purpose reports but conflict risks
These patterns highlight that while antireligion enabled short-term in collectivist systems, it often amplified authoritarian excesses, whereas religious societies' outcomes hinge more on political freedoms than alone; peer-reviewed analyses caution against conflating with causation, noting institutional quality as a .

Modern Manifestations

New Atheism and Its Evolution

New Atheism crystallized in the early 2000s as an assertive intellectual push against religious belief, emphasizing empirical rationality and direct confrontation with faith's societal costs. Sparked by the September 11, 2001, attacks, it gained initial traction with Sam Harris's : Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason, published on August 11, 2004, which argued that doctrinal faith enables violence and impedes reason. The movement's core proponents—, , Harris, and —became known as the "Four Horsemen" for their coordinated critiques, exemplified by Dawkins's (September 2006), which sold over 3 million copies worldwide and contended that belief in God is a delusion unsupported by . Dennett's Breaking the Spell (2006) urged treating religion as a natural phenomenon subject to scientific scrutiny, while Hitchens's (2007) cataloged religion's historical atrocities. At its peak around 2006–2008, New Atheism boosted atheism's public profile through bestsellers, debates, and media appearances, correlating with a surge in U.S. religiously unaffiliated adults ("nones") from 16% in 2007 to 29% by 2021, per surveys. Proponents claimed religion's decline was inevitable under rational scrutiny, yet empirical trends showed persistence of belief, with nones comprising just 4% explicit atheists and 5% agnostics in 2021 data. The movement's confrontational tactics, prioritizing first-principles attacks on over accommodation, drew acclaim for intellectual rigor but criticism for oversimplifying religion's adaptive roles in human and . By the 2010s, fragmented amid personal losses and ideological rifts. Hitchens's death from on December 15, 2011, removed a pivotal debater, while surviving figures diverged: Dawkins faced backlash for comments deemed insensitive to progressive norms, Harris shifted toward and political critique via podcasts, and Dennett focused on . Politicization exacerbated splits, with some aligning against identity-driven —evident in 2015 "Letter to an Online Atheism Community" controversies—alienating left-leaning atheists who viewed the movement's Islam critiques as insufficiently nuanced. Recent data (2023–2024) reveal stalled growth, with nones steady at 29% and Christianity's decline slowing to 62% identification, indicating New Atheism's momentum failed to yield sustained . Contemporary manifestations emphasize decentralized skepticism over organized militancy, incorporating evolutionary psychology insights into belief's persistence and addressing causal factors like low religiosity's links to fertility declines in secular nations—trends unpredicted by early New Atheists. While core arguments endure in outlets like Harris's Making Sense podcast (launched 2013), the label "New Atheism" has faded, supplanted by hybrid discourses blending antireligion with cultural analysis, reflecting realism about faith's resilience absent comprehensive causal alternatives. In recent decades, global surveys indicate a marked decline in religious identification and practice, aligning with broader that indirectly bolster antireligious perspectives by reducing organized religion's societal dominance. A 2025 Gallup International poll across multiple countries found that the proportion of respondents self-identifying as religious fell from 68% in 2005 to 56% in 2024, while the share claiming to be atheists or agnostics rose correspondingly, reflecting a steady erosion of religious self-conception amid , expansion, and technological influences. This pattern holds despite absolute growth in religious populations due to higher fertility rates in devout regions like and the , where Islam's share increased from 23.8% to 24.9% of the between 2010 and 2020 per data. A 2025 study published in analyzed data from over 100 countries and identified a predictable three-stage sequence in religious decline: initial drops in worship service attendance among younger cohorts, followed by reduced religious identification, and culminating in diminished in core doctrines. This secular transition, evident since the mid-20th century, has accelerated in 35 countries where religious affiliation shares dropped by at least 5 percentage points from 2010 to 2020, particularly in , , and parts of East Asia. In the United States, Pew's 2023-24 Religious Landscape Study reported 29% of adults as religiously unaffiliated—comprising 5% atheists, 6% agnostics, and 18% "nothing in particular"—a figure that has doubled since 2007, though many unaffiliated retain spiritual or secular humanist leanings rather than outright antireligious hostility. Recent developments underscore uneven progress for antireligion, with institutional pushback in some areas amid rising government restrictions on religious expression, which peaked globally in according to Pew's analysis of 198 countries. In Western contexts, secular has manifested in policy shifts, such as expanded restrictions on religious symbols in public spaces (e.g., France's extensions of laïcité laws) and growing academic critiques of religion's role in public life, but active antireligious movements like have waned since the 2010s, evolving into broader cultural skepticism rather than organized campaigns. Conversely, in authoritarian states like , state-enforced antireligion persists through campaigns against "superstition" and of religious groups, contributing to suppressed rates. These trends suggest antireligion gains traction via passive disaffiliation more than militant opposition, tempered by demographic countercurrents in high-fertility religious populations.

References

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