Less-anecdotally, you could compare the amount of atheists and/or non-religious people, to the amount actually signed up for cryonics.
I assume you mean to compare the ratio of atheists among general population to the ratio of atheists among signed up. Won’t work very well, as the exposure to the argument is too tilted towards atheists, and it’s too hard to correct for that
Nope, I meant compare amount signed up to the amount of atheists (raw numbers). That doesn’t tell you whether religion is a factor in avoiding cryonics, but it does tell you whether religion is the only thing keeping everybody from signing up for cryonics. Since by far the majority of atheists are not signed up for cryonics, it’s pretty clear that religion isn’t what’s stopping people.
ETA: Okay, Vladimir_Nesov (below) has convinced me I wasn’t considering the same question.
Nope, I meant compare amount signed up to the amount of atheists (raw numbers).
That’s silly. Too few people know of the idea, and it’s too hard to persuade any given person. The question wasn’t about absolute difficulty of getting the argument through, but on the relative effect of being religious on the ability of a person to accept the procedure.
I assume you mean to compare the ratio of atheists among general population to the ratio of atheists among signed up. Won’t work very well, as the exposure to the argument is too tilted towards atheists, and it’s too hard to correct for that
Nope, I meant compare amount signed up to the amount of atheists (raw numbers). That doesn’t tell you whether religion is a factor in avoiding cryonics, but it does tell you whether religion is the only thing keeping everybody from signing up for cryonics. Since by far the majority of atheists are not signed up for cryonics, it’s pretty clear that religion isn’t what’s stopping people.
ETA: Okay, Vladimir_Nesov (below) has convinced me I wasn’t considering the same question.
That’s silly. Too few people know of the idea, and it’s too hard to persuade any given person. The question wasn’t about absolute difficulty of getting the argument through, but on the relative effect of being religious on the ability of a person to accept the procedure.