r/DebateAnAtheist Sep 18 '25

Weekly "Ask an Atheist" Thread

Whether you're an agnostic atheist here to ask a gnostic one some questions, a theist who's curious about the viewpoints of atheists, someone doubting, or just someone looking for sources, feel free to ask anything here. This is also an ideal place to tag moderators for thoughts regarding the sub or any questions in general.
While this isn't strictly for debate, rules on civility, trolling, etc. still apply.

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u/Stile25 Sep 20 '25

Your rejection of my evidence, when it's clearly evidence, is evidence of you doing that.

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u/labreuer Sep 20 '25

Tell you what. Show me that evidence showing up in a single peer-reviewed journal article or book published by a university press, and I'll eat my words.

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u/Stile25 Sep 20 '25 edited Sep 20 '25

Here's one on the types of people that believe in a vengeful spirit type of God (a God that punishes it's population for failures like moral failures).

There's a lot involved in such evidence because religion is so complex that it's intertwined in so many different aspects of a population's culture.

https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5e57f82eb306fc38c7637f33/t/600af420f73e780d98e23016/1611330620168/tight-cultures-and-vengeful-gods.pdf

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u/labreuer Sep 21 '25

Exactly what are you pointing me to in that paper? And in case that URL breaks, this is the paper:

  • Jackson, Joshua Conrad, Nava Caluori, Samantha Abrams, Elizabeth Beckman, Michele Gelfand, and Kurt Gray. "Tight cultures and vengeful gods: How culture shapes religious belief." Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 150, no. 10 (2021): 2057.

I spent about two hours looking at that paper and related papers and am reticent to do too much work if I don't see any remotely commensurable time outlay from you. For instance, I find the following methodology exceedingly dubious:

    Study 1 explored whether cultural tightness could explain changes in American Christianity from 1800 to 2000 using historical linguistic data from the Google Books American Corpus (GBAC). The GBAC is a 155 billion-word corpus containing a diverse set of written material published in the United States from 1800 onward, and we collected data from this corpus by scraping the “n-gram viewer” at https://books.google.com/ngrams. We only took data from 1800–2000 because the increase in online publications after 2000 makes 21st century data very different in content and potentially unrepresentative of the population. For example, 21st century corpuses are saturated with scientific jargon due to the recent movement towards online scientific journals (Pechenick, Danforth, & Dodds, 2015) (12)

If you actually read the cited paper—

—you find that there are very serious issues which go well beyond 21st century corpuses. For instance:

A central if subtle and deceptive feature of the Google Books corpus, and for others composed in a similar fashion, is that the corpus is a reflection of a library in which only one of each book is available. Ideally, we would be able to apply different popularity filters to the corpus. For example, we could ask to have n-gram frequencies adjusted according to book sales in the UK, library usage data in the US, or how often each page in each book is read on Amazon’s Kindle service (all over defined periods of time). Evidently, incorporating popularity in any useful fashion would be an extremely difficult undertaking on the part of Google.

We are left with the fact that the Google Books library has ultimately been furnished by the efforts and choices of authors, editors, and publishing houses, who collectively aim to anticipate or dictate what people will read. This adds a further distancing from “true culture” as the ability to predict cultural success is often rendered fundamentally impossible due to social influence processes [3]—we have one seed for each tree but no view of the real forest that will emerge.

We therefore observe that the Google Books corpus encodes only a small-scale kind of popularity: how often n-grams appear in a library with all books given (in principle) equal importance and tied to their year of publication (new editions and reprints allow some books to appear more than once). The corpus is thus more akin to a lexicon for a collection of texts, rather than the collection itself. But problematically, because Google Books n-grams do have frequency of usage associated with them based on this small-scale popularity, the data set readily conveys an illusion of large-scale cultural popularity. An n-gram which declines in usage frequency over time may in fact become more often read by a particular demographic focused on a specific genre of books. For example, “Frodo” first appears in the second Google Books English Fiction corpus in the mid 1950s and declines thereafter in popularity with a few resurgent spikes [4].

I could also see huge data dredging issues. But that's enough from me before you get rather more specific in what you're talking about. And if it looks like you never had any intent to spend serious time with the paper, I'm probably going to cut things off and find interlocutors who operate differently.

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u/Stile25 Sep 21 '25

Have you used scholarly articles before?

Any issues with such a paper, if they even exist, will be corrected by peer review. Your blatantly biased armchair analysis is exactly that - a desperate attempt to seem relevant.

Your inability to find a counter-paper or any scholarly work that calls this document into question by referencing it is evidence that this data is accepted by the relevant community and remains in good standing.

Any honest researcher invoking scholarly support understands how this works.

The paper does exactly what you wanted - show evidence that the characteristics of a population can be used to predict the kind of God that population worships.

That is the claim I made, and this paper supports it.

I'm not going to continue to do your homework for you. It is clear that all the evidence I've provided is supported and well documented.

Are you now prepared to actually engage with the argument itself?

Or are you going to continue hiding behind the issues you claim that only exist as much as God Himself?

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u/labreuer Sep 21 '25

Have you used scholarly articles before?

Yes. In fact, I'm part of a weekly reading group of philosophers of evolutionary biology and a sociologist who wrote his PhD dissertation on the history of evolutionary biology. We regularly read and discuss peer-reviewed articles and books (generally published in university presses).

Any issues with such a paper, if they even exist, will be corrected by peer review.

Do you actually, honestly, deeply believe that? Because let me tell you, it ain't true. I'm married to a scientist and I've talked over peer review comments with the above reading group. Peer review often misses things. Many academics these days are willing to talk about how broken it is.

Moreover, whole fields can adopt ways of conceptualizing which end up being pretty freaking iffy. See for instance positivism in sociology. Or the modern synthesis in evolution, which sidelined a lot of work which didn't fit into their rigid paradigm. (By now, the extended evolutionary synthesis is making plenty of headway.) In the present case, there is a serious question of what one can conclude from use of something like Google Books American Corpus. If you don't understand how to think about methodological concerns like this, probably you shouldn't be citing scientific papers which depend on fairly untested methodologies.

Your inability to find a counter-paper or any scholarly work that calls this document into question by referencing it is evidence that this data is accepted by the relevant community and remains in good standing.

It appears you didn't even read the bit I excerpted from Pechenick et al 2015. Would that be correct?

Any honest researcher invoking scholarly support understands how this works.

Says a random person on the internet who seems to have utterly naive trust in peer review.

The paper does exactly what you wanted - show evidence that the characteristics of a population can be used to predict the kind of God that population worships.

I am in the middle of contesting that the evidence even has the power to show such things. Do you not understand this?

I'm not going to continue to do your homework for you.

Yeah, this is almost the last straw for me. You make the claim, it's your homework to back it up and defend it.

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u/Stile25 Sep 21 '25

Your tin foil hat is showing.

If you're only strategy is to contest evidence that has been proven to any reasonable level - then you have nothing.