%0 Journal Article %T An Integrative Complexity Analysis of Religious and Irreligious Thinking %A Alex Luce %A Joeann M. Salvati %A Kimberly Parrow %A Lucian G. Conway %A Shannon C. Houck %J SAGE Open %@ 2158-2440 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/2158244018796302 %X Stereotypical views cast religious believers as closed-minded, unthinking individuals, and irreligious persons as comparatively more intellectual and complex. But are these perceptions accurate? To investigate, three studies assessed differences between religious and irreligious thinking on Integrative Complexity (IC). In Study 1, six atheist¨CChristian opponents were selected for IC. Findings revealed that Christians were significantly more complex than their atheist counterparts overall, but variability existed across comparisons. Study 2 examined persons writing about what matters most to them, finding that people more likely to generate religious language had significantly higher complexity. Study 3 evaluated a famous atheist-to-religious convert (C.S. Lewis) who wrote comparable materials during an irreligious and religious phase of his life. Results demonstrated that Lewis¡¯ complexity was higher during his religious phase. Taken together, Studies 1 to 3 suggest that religious thinkers are sometimes more complex than nonreligious thinkers and vice versa¡ªvariability that sometimes goes unnoticed in public circles %K integrative complexity %K religiosity %K atheism %K public perception %K stereotypes %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/2158244018796302