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Nonconventional Beliefs Among Australian Science and Nonscience Students
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-16, 16:34 authored by Martin GrimmerMartin Grimmer, White, KDAttempts to determine the effect of science education on levels of nonconventional (paranormal or superstitious) beliefs have produced inconsistent findings. Many researchers have examined only overall levels of belief, neglecting the subsets of different phenomena. In this study, we investigated whether groups of science and nonscience students could be differentiated according to their degree of belief in a variety of nonconventional phenomena. Students from the departments of science (n = 109), medicine (n = 129), and arts (n = 117) were assigned scores that measured seven nonconventional beliefs: Popular science; fake and obscure; traditional religion; alternative medicines; fortune telling; psi; and a “deviant†factor. A discriminant analysis performed on the three groups' scores revealed one significant discriminant function, interpreted as a “pseudopractitioners†function, with medical students showing the lowest level of belief, arts students the highest, and science students falling in between. © 1992 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
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Publication title
The Journal of PsychologyVolume
126Issue
5Pagination
521-527ISSN
0022-3980Department/School
TSBEPublisher
Heldref PublicationsPlace of publication
Washington DCRepository Status
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