Jiro comments on What Can We Learn About Human Psychology from Christian Apologetics? - Less Wrong
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Sure, but you don't really think IQ and education have nothing to do with whether someone is an atheist, right?
Here is a question; are people among the cognitive and educational who have other status hits more or less likely to be an atheist? If you're right then men who are educated and have high IQs but are gay should be less likely to admit to atheism, yes?
The point isn't even whether one is better than the other (though it certainly seems plausible that a less radical, more comforting position made with a kinder, politer tone would do better). The point is people who try that strategy don't get book deals. They don't even get popular on the internet. And that is despite it probably being the more popular position over all. They don't get popular because the readership of pro-atheist arguments are people who already agree with the arguments. Remember this quote:
You could replace "Craig" with Dawkins, Harris or Hitchens and no one would even notice.
If they do because people with those traits can more afford to lose the status, that's still having something to do with it.
Besides, there's the huge confounding factor that being educated or high IQ is more likely to lead to lead you to truth and atheism is true.
If the status lost by being atheist and the status lost by being gay are completely different, this would be true. I would suggest that the status that is lost by either one overlaps heavily, given the nature of anti-gay bias. Someone who already lost that portion of status because of being gay cannot lose it again by being atheist. This would neutralize or even reverse the effect.