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  1. Irreligião (também referida como incredulidade, ausência de religião ou pessoas sem religião) é a ausência, indiferença ou não prática de uma religião. [ 1] . Alguns segmentos podem posicionar-se contrários e, eventualmente, inclusive ser hostis às religiões, como pode ser o caso do anticlericalismo, do antiteísmo e da antirreligião.

  2. Portugal is one of the most religious countries in Europe, most Portuguese believe with certainty in the existence of God and religion is important in their lives. [4] [5] According to the Pew Research Center Portugal is the 9th most religious country out of 34 European countries, 40% of Portuguese Catholics pray daily, [6] and 36% say religion ...

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  4. Relative to its own populations, Zuckerman ranks the top 5 countries with the highest possible ranges of agnostics and atheists: Sweden (46–85%), Vietnam (81%), Denmark (43–80%), Norway (31–72%), and Japan (64–65%). [8] [9] A 2023 Gallup International survey found that Sweden was the country with the highest percentage of citizens that ...

    Country Or Region
    (2012) [11]
    (2017) [12]
    Afghanistan ( details)
    < 0.1%
    9%
    Albania ( details)
    1.4%
    39%
    12.2%
    34%
    1.3%
    6%
  5. Irreligion in Brazil has increased in the last few decades. In the 2010 census, 8% of the population identified as "irreligious". [4] Since 1970, the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics has included sem religião ( Portuguese for no religion) as a self-description option in their decennial census, for people who do not consider ...

  6. Folk religion. In religious studies and folkloristics, folk religion, popular religion, traditional religion, or vernacular religion comprises various forms and expressions of religion that are distinct from the official doctrines and practices of organized religion. The precise definition of folk religion varies among scholars.

  7. Chara Scroope, 2018. Religion, particularly Catholicism, has played a significant role in social and political life throughout Portuguese history. Throughout most of Portugal’s history, few non-Catholics lived in the country.

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