Holism and pro-environmental commitment: An examination on the mediating roles of affective and cognitive determinants

Publication date: 15 October 2019Source: Personality and Individual Differences, Volume 149Author(s): Kenichi Ito, Liman Man Wai LiAbstractTo advance the understanding of great individual variations in pro-environmental tendencies, the current research examined the role of holistic versus analytic thinking, which is non-specific to environmental issues, and explored the underlying mechanisms via both affective and cognitive determinants, i.e., affective affinity toward nature and awareness of risk to nature, respectively. Study 1 found that stronger holistic (vs. analytic) thinking predicted greater pro-environmental commitment, and this relation was explained by greater affective affinity toward nature and greater awareness of risk to nature. Recruiting a larger community sample with diverse demographic characteristics, Study 2 replicated the patterns of Study 1. Study 3 manipulated thinking style and found some partial evidence for the relationships among the examined variables. This research highlights the importance of domain-general individual characteristics in environmental research.
Source: Personality and Individual Differences - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research