Too strong to care? Investigating the links between formidability, worldviews, and views on climate and disaster.

Q2 Social Sciences
Marjorie L Prokosch, Colin Tucker Smith, Nicholas Kerry, Jason von Meding
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

People vary in climate change skepticism and in their views on disaster cause and prevention. For example, the United States boasts higher rates of climate skepticism than other countries, especially among Republicans. Research into the individual differences that shape variation in climate-related beliefs represents an important opportunity for those seeking ways to mitigate climate change and climate-related disasters (e.g., floods). In this registered report, we proposed a study examining how individual difference in physical formidability, worldview, and affect relate to attitudes about disaster and climate change. We predicted that highly formidable men would tend to endorse social inequality, hold status quo defensive worldviews, report lower levels of empathy, and report attitudes that promote disaster risk accumulation via lesser support for social intervention. The results of an online study (Study 1) support the notion that men's self-perceived formidability is related to disaster and climate change beliefs in the predicted direction and that this relationship is mediated by hierarchical worldview and status quo defense but not empathy. An analysis of a preliminary sample for the in-lab study (Study 2) suggests that self-perceived formidability relates to disaster views, climate views, and status quo maintaining worldviews.

太强而不在乎?调查强大、世界观和对气候和灾难的看法之间的联系。
人们对气候变化持怀疑态度,对灾害原因和预防的看法也各不相同。例如,美国对气候变化持怀疑态度的比例高于其他国家,尤其是在共和党人中。对于那些寻求缓解气候变化和气候相关灾害(如洪水)的方法的人来说,研究影响气候相关信念变化的个体差异是一个重要的机会。在这篇已注册的报告中,我们提出了一项研究,研究个体在强健性、世界观和影响方面的差异如何与对灾难和气候变化的态度有关。我们预测,高度强大的男性倾向于支持社会不平等,保持现状的防御性世界观,报告较低的同理心水平,并报告通过较少支持社会干预来促进灾害风险积累的态度。一项在线研究(研究1)的结果支持了这样的观点,即男性自我感知的强大性与预测方向的灾难和气候变化信念有关,这种关系是由等级世界观和现状防御介导的,而不是共情介导的。对实验室研究的初步样本(研究2)的分析表明,自我感知的强大性与灾难观、气候观和维持现状的世界观有关。
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来源期刊
Politics and the Life Sciences
Politics and the Life Sciences Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
2.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: POLITICS AND THE LIFE SCIENCES is an interdisciplinary peer-reviewed journal with a global audience. PLS is owned and published by the ASSOCIATION FOR POLITICS AND THE LIFE SCIENCES, the APLS, which is both an American Political Science Association (APSA) Related Group and an American Institute of Biological Sciences (AIBS) Member Society. The PLS topic range is exceptionally broad: evolutionary and laboratory insights into political behavior, including political violence, from group conflict to war, terrorism, and torture; political analysis of life-sciences research, health policy, environmental policy, and biosecurity policy; and philosophical analysis of life-sciences problems, such as bioethical controversies.
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