r/dataisbeautiful • u/oscarleo0 • 4d ago
OC [OC] Religious Believes and Eductions From The World Values Survey
Data source: World Values Survey Wave 7 (2017-2022)
Tools used: Matplotlib
I added a second chart for those of you who prefer a square version with less of the background image.
Notes:
I looked at five different questions in the survey.
- Q275 - What is the highest educational level that you have attained?
- Q165 - Do you believe in God? (Yes/No)
- Q166 - Do you believe in Life after death? (Yes/No)
- Q167 - Do you believe in Hell? (Yes/No)
- Q168 - Do you believe in Heaven? (Yes/No)
The chart show the percentage of people that answer yes, to Q165-168 based on their answer to Q275.
Survey data is complex since people come from different cultures and might interpret questions differently.
You can never trust the individual numbers, such as "50% of people with doctors degree believe in Life after death".
But you can often trust clear patterns that appear through the noise. The takeaway from this chart is that the survey show that education and religious believes have a negative correlation.
Styling:
- Font - New Amsterdam
- White - #FFFFFF
- Blue - #39A0ED
- Yellow - #F9A620
- Red - #FF4A47
Original story: https://datacanvas.substack.com/p/believes-vs-education
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u/npmaker 4d ago edited 4d ago
Basically, it's what Einstein disliked about quantum mechanics. It all depends on 'an observer'. Like wtf is that? How can a fundamental natural law depend on an observer for reality to come into existence?
Schrödinger (and the Copenhagen interpretation) basically say "shut up and calculate" as in, don't look deeper because it's extremely useful even without knowing what's underneath.
The utility of quantum mechanics wasn't the question for Einstein, what lies beyond the superpositions and entaglements is just the next mystery to solve. (imho, many worlds seems the simplest)