27 research outputs found

    Meat and morality:The moral foundation of purity, but not harm, predicts attitudes toward cultured meat

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    Cultured meat (also referred to as cultivated, cell-based, or cell-cultured meat) is a novel food technology that is presented as a method of meat production without reliance on large-scale industrial farming. The pro-cultured meat narrative rests, in part, on a moral foundation: cultured meat is purported to alleviate the environmental and animal welfare harms associated with farmed meat. Despite this narrative, no research has examined which moral values underpin attitudes towards cultured meat. To examine this, we surveyed 1861 participants from the United States and Germany about their moral foundations and their attitudes towards cultured meat. In line with predictions, people who more strongly endorse moral values about purity (i.e., had higher scores on the purity subscale of the moral foundations scale) held more negative attitudes towards cultured meat. However, this relationship was much more consistent among participants from the United States than participants from Germany. Against predictions, attitudes towards cultured meat were not reliably associated with the extent to which people focus on harm as a moral foundation. The latter finding was particularly surprising in light of harm-reduction narratives around cultured meat. These findings demonstrate the need for a more nuanced discussion about, and understanding of, consumer concerns around cultured meat and the values that underpin them

    Moral expansiveness around the world:The role of societal factors across 36 countries

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    International audienceWhat are the things that we think matter morally, and how do societal factors influence this? To date, research has explored several individual-level and historical factors that influence the size of our ‘moral circles.' There has, however, been less attention focused on which societal factors play a role. We present the first multi-national exploration of moral expansiveness—that is, the size of people’s moral circles across countries. We found low generalized trust, greater perceptions of a breakdown in the social fabric of society, and greater perceived economic inequality were associated with smaller moral circles. Generalized trust also helped explain the effects of perceived inequality on lower levels of moral inclusiveness. Other inequality indicators (i.e., Gini coefficients) were, however, unrelated to moral expansiveness. These findings suggest that societal factors, especially those associated with generalized trust, may influence the size of our moral circles

    Moral Expansiveness Scale

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    Instructions, Qualtrics upload, and other related files for researchers wanting to make use of the MES

    Compassionate Mind Training Can Increase Moral Expansiveness: A Randomised Controlled Trial

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    Can training in compassion help us to broaden our moral circles? 102 participants (87 female) took part in a Compassionate Mind Training workshop aimed to cultivate greater levels of compassion in parents. Participants were randomized to either the CMT (Compassionate Mind Training) intervention (n = 48) or waitlist control group (n = 54). Participants were measured at pre-, two-weeks post-intervention, and the CMT group again at three-month follow-up. At two-weeks post intervention participants in the CMT group compared to waitlist control had significantly increased total moral expansiveness (moral concern for human, non-human animals, and environmental entities), as well as increases specifically for family, revered and villain sub-groups. At three-month follow-up, these outcomes improved, with reported moral concern for all subgroups significantly increasing, including out-groups, stigmatized, animals, plants and the environment. The results from this first RCT evaluation of a brief two-hour CMT intervention to increase moral expansiveness shows promise for how we help increase moral expansiveness for in- and out-groups, and for the natural environment

    Moral polarization and support for strong leaders

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    Development of Moral Concern

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    Prominent theorists have made the argument that modern humans express moral concern for a greater number of entities than at any other time in our past. Moreover, adults show stable patterns in the degrees of concern they afford certain entities over others, yet it remains unknown when and how these patterns of moral decision-making manifest in development. Children aged 4 to 10 years (N = 151) placed 24 pictures of human, animal, and environmental entities on a stratified circle representing three levels of moral concern. Although younger and older children expressed similar overall levels of moral concern, older children demonstrated a more graded understanding of concern by including more entities within the outer reaches of their moral circles (i.e., they were less likely to view moral inclusion as a simple in vs. out binary decision). With age children extended greater concern to humans than other forms of life, and more concern to vulnerable groups, such as the sick and disabled. Notably, children’s level of concern for human entities predicted their prosocial behavior. The current research provides novel insights into the development of our moral reasoning and its structure within childhood
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