56% of Japanese have had some form of supernatural experience
The Yomiuri reports on an interesting survey:
According to the survey, 26 percent of respondents said they believed in a religion, virtually unchanged from a similar survey conducted three years ago. Only 37 percent said religion was important for living a happy life.
Views of people’s religious sentiment were split, with 45 percent of respondents saying Japanese had little religious faith while 49 percent thought otherwise.
However, 94 percent of respondents said they respected their ancestors, and 56 percent claimed to have had some form of supernatural experience.
The results suggested that many Japanese feel little affinity to a particular religion, but many do harbor feelings of respect for things that are scientifically unproven.
The Yomiuri Shimbun interviewed 3,000 randomly selected people across the country face-to-face on May 17-18, of whom 1,837 gave valid answers.
Asked about what happens to people’s spirits after they die, 30 percent said they believed they would be reincarnated, 24 percent said they would go to another world and 18 percent answered they would vanish.
The recent popularity of new forms of spirituality and other new age-related beliefs, such as an interest in previous lives and guardian angels, was particularly prominent among female respondents. Although 21 percent of all respondents said they were interested in such thinking–far below the 75 percent who were not–27 percent of women saw the appeal of such beliefs, whereas only 13 percent of men said they felt this way….
