无知
概化理论
气候变化
科学共识
心理学
社会心理学
政治学
全球变暖
发展心理学
法学
生态学
生物
作者
Sandra J. Geiger,Jana Katharina Köhler,Zenith Nara Costa Delabrida,Karla Alejandra Garduño Realivazquez,Christian A. P. Haugestad,Hirotaka Imada,Aishwarya Iyer,Carya Maharja,Dan C. Mann,Michalina Marczak,Olivia Melville,Sari R. R. Nijssen,Nattavudh Powdthavee,Radisti A. Praptiwi,Gargi Ranade,Claudio D. Rosa,Valeria Vitale,Małgorzata Winkowska,Lei Zhang,Mathew P. White
标识
DOI:10.1177/09567976251335585
摘要
Most people believe in human-caused climate change, yet this public consensus can be collectively underestimated ( pluralistic ignorance ). Across two studies using primary data ( n = 3,653 adult participants; 11 countries) and secondary data ( n s = 60,230 and 22,496 adult participants; 55 countries), we tested (a) the generalizability of pluralistic ignorance about climate-change beliefs, (b) the effects of a public-consensus intervention on climate action, and (c) the possibility that cultural tightness-looseness might serve as a country-level predictor of pluralistic ignorance. In Study 1, people across 11 countries underestimated the prevalence of proclimate views by at least 7.5% in Indonesia (90% credible interval, or CrI = [5.0, 10.1]), and up to 20.8% in Brazil (90% CrI = [18.2, 23.4]. Providing information about the actual public consensus on climate change was largely ineffective, except for a slight increase in willingness to express one’s proclimate opinion, δ = 0.05 (90% CrI = [−0.02, 0.11]). In Study 2, pluralistic ignorance about willingness to contribute financially to fight climate change was slightly more pronounced in looser than tighter cultures, highlighting the particular need for pluralistic-ignorance research in these countries.
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