Those expressing their empathy for “those who are suffering” come in second, making up 62% of the total. The third comes with 40%, illustrating the percentage of those who wish to offer help to those in need.
Only 12% of respondents are afraid of encountering a similar scenario. Just a few adult Americans express their satisfaction “if the person seems to have deserved it.”
A large percentage of U.S. adults believe in fate and reincarnation
One-third of all U.S. adults show their belief in reincarnation, in which people are reborn, beginning a new life after their deaths.
Nearly half of U.S. adults consider fate a truly-exist one, meaning a person’s whole life is predetermined and well-planned. Remarkably, almost two-thirds of Black Americans (65%) hold this faith.
Over eight-in-ten in U.S adults suppose that science or natural causes can not answer all phenomena.
In detail, majorities say they somehow can feel the dead person’s presence or receive God’s direct guidance or obtain a specific answer to a prayer request, and even have a near-death experience when a person’s soul actually leaves their body.