Humanizing animals does not reduce blatant dehumanization by children or adults

Wen Zhou , Aleah Bowie , Jingzhi Tan , Brian Hare
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Abstract

Blatantly likening humans to animals is associated with discrimination and hostility. The power of dehumanizing animal metaphors is thought to lie in the belief that animals are inferior to humans and do not deserve full moral concern. Previous work suggests that perceiving a narrower divide between humans and animals encourages the expansion of moral concern and reduces subtle dehumanization. Here we described animals as possessing human-like mental states, and tested if this manipulation would extend to the reduction of blatant dehumanization of an outgroup. Results demonstrate both children (5–12 years of age) and adults perceived animals as more similar to humans when animals were attributed feelings, intentions and beliefs. However, this manipulation did not reduce blatant dehumanization in either age group. These results suggest that subtle and blatant dehumanization may require distinct intervention strategies, and imply potential differences in their psychological mechanisms.

Abstract Image

动物人性化并不能减少儿童或成人公然的非人化行为
公然将人类比作动物与歧视和敌意有关。非人化动物隐喻的力量被认为在于人们认为动物比人低等,不值得全面的道德关怀。以往的研究表明,如果认为人与动物之间的鸿沟较窄,就会鼓励扩大道德关怀,减少微妙的非人化。在这里,我们将动物描述为拥有与人类相似的心理状态,并测试了这一操作是否会扩展到减少对外群的公然非人化。结果表明,当动物被赋予感情、意图和信念时,儿童(5-12 岁)和成人都会认为动物与人类更相似。然而,这种操作并没有减少任何一个年龄组中的明显非人化现象。这些结果表明,微妙的非人化和明显的非人化可能需要不同的干预策略,这也意味着它们的心理机制可能存在差异。
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CiteScore
1.70
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