RT Article T1 Rethinking Autism, Theism, and Atheism JF Archive for the psychology of religion VO 40 IS 1 SP 1 OP 31 A1 Visuri, Ingela LA English PB SAGE Publishing YR 2018 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1576258106 AB This anthropologically informed study explores descriptions of communication with invisible, superhuman agents in high functioning young adults on the autism spectrum. Based on material from interviews, two hypotheses are formulated. First, autistic individuals may experience communication with bodiless agents (e.g., gods, angels, and spirits) as less complex than interaction with peers, since it is unrestricted by multisensory input, such as body language, facial expressions, and intonation. Second, descriptions of how participants absorb into “imaginary realities” suggest that such mental states are desirable due to qualities that facilitate social cognition: While the empirical world comes through as fragmented and incoherent, imaginary worlds offer predictability, emotional coherence, and benevolent minds. These results do not conform to popular expectations that autistic minds are less adapted to experience supernatural agents, and it is instead argued that imaginative, autistic individuals may embrace religious and fictive agents in search for socially and emotionally comprehensible interaction. K1 Autism : religion : superhuman agents : mentalizing abilities : imagination : fantasy proneness : emotional coherence : multisensory binding DO 10.1163/15736121-12341348