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Apr 6, 2021 · In the latest study, Americans ages 18 to 34 and those 35 to 49 (87%) are more likely to say there is more to life than the physical world than those 65 and older (79%). The religiously unaffiliated are the most likely to disagree (20%).
- Majorities of U.S. Adults Say They Believe in Heaven, Hell
- Believers Largely See Heaven as Free from Suffering, Hell as Just The Opposite
- Fewer Than Half of Americans Believe in Reincarnation, Fate
- Most Americans Believe People Can Communicate with God Or Other Higher Power
- Most Believe Some Interaction Is Possible Between The Living and The Dead
Nearly three-quarters of U.S. adults say they believe in heaven. (The survey did not immediately offer a definition of heaven, though subsequent questions explored what respondents think heaven is like.) Large majorities of all Christian subgroups say they believe in heaven, while belief is much less common among religiously unaffiliated Americans ...
In addition to asking about general belief in heaven and hell, the survey asked about specific characteristics of these two destinations to determine what Americans think they are like. In the case of heaven, respondents were presented with nine prospective traits, and asked whether heaven is “definitely like this,” “probably like this,” “probably ...
The survey also asked respondents about a few other concepts associated with the afterlife or the supernatural. Though the share of adults who believe in reincarnation – i.e., that “people will be reborn again and again in this world” – is much lower than the share who believe in heaven or hell, it is a view held by a substantial minority of the po...
The survey also gave examples of various supernatural occurrences and asked respondents to say whether they think each is possible, and if so, whether they had ever personally experienced it. Fully two-thirds of U.S. adults believe it is possible for people to receive a “definite answer to a specific prayer request,” and the same share (67%) think ...
About seven-in-ten Americans say it is possible to feel “the presence of someone who has died,” while roughly half say that living people can be helped by those who have passed (51%) or communicate with them in some way (47%). When asked about their personal experiences with the deceased, 44% of U.S. adults say that they have felt the presence of s...
May 12, 2021 · In the latest study, Americans ages 18 to 34 and those 35 to 49 (87%) are more likely to say there is more to life than the physical world than those 65 and older (79%). The religiously unaffiliated are the most likely to disagree (20%).
Dec 7, 2023 · Nearly two-thirds of Americans (65%) say they believe in spirits or unseen spiritual forces, while 14% say they do not. Around one-fifth are unsure. Protestants (72%) and Catholics (68%) are much more likely than Jewish Americans (33%) to believe in spirits or spiritual forces.
- Reem Nadeem
Dec 7, 2023 · An overwhelming majority of U.S. adults (83%) say they believe that people have a soul or spirit in addition to their physical body. And 81% say there is something spiritual beyond the natural world, even if we cannot see it.
- Reem Nadeem
Dec 6, 2022 · According to Pew, roughly six in ten Americans (61%) believe in both heaven and hell. In addition, more Americans believe in heaven than in hell, and roughly a quarter of Americans (26%)...
Jun 15, 2005 · A 2010 60 Minutes/Vanity Fair poll found that 65% of Americans believed that people go to heaven, hell or purgatory after death, 7% believed they go to another dimension, 6% believed they are reborn on earth, and 2% believed they become ghosts. Just 13% did not believe there is any afterlife, and 7% didn't know.