| Literature DB >> 35951596 |
Dexon Pasaribu1, Bagus Takwin2, Pim Martens3.
Abstract
Several studies show that religion hinders concerns for the natural environment preservation. Others, however, have found that the belief in God or the identification with a particular religion is not associated with measures for environmental concerns. This study investigates the influence of religious narrative framing and the relation between Allport's intrinsic personal (IP) and extrinsic social (ES) religious orientation towards general environmental apathy (GEA) and acceptability for harming animals (AIS). This study surveyed 657 teachers and school staff in East Java, Indonesia. Using ANOVA, we find that religious narrative affects participant's GEA and AIS. Participants in stewardship narrative group have significantly lower GEA and AIS compared to participants in human dominance and the non-narratives control group. Using multiple regression, we also confirm the persistence of religious narrative's influence towards GEA. In addition, lower GEA and AIS correlate with higher IP and lower ES. Lastly, we identify and discuss significant demographic and other determinants relation to GEA and AIS.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35951596 PMCID: PMC9371258 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0271515
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Priming narrative treatment check questions.
| No | Statement | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 01. | Human beings are superior to other beings |
| Environmental damage is high and worrying |
| 02. | Humans are sent to lead |
| natural resources are threatened |
| 03. | Human beings are superior to other beings |
| God sent man to take care of |
| 04. | Humans needs to support their family |
| Humans need to protect and care for nature and the environment |
| 05. | God sent man to lead |
| Wildlife welfare (protecting all living things) |
| 06. | God sent man to take care of |
| Humans are sent to lead |
| 07. | God sent man to lead |
| Animals need a place to live |
| 08. | Humans don’t give in and worry too much |
| Wildlife welfare (protecting all living things) |
| 09. | God created humans as noble creatures |
| God sent man to take care of |
| 10. | God sent man to lead |
| Human life depends on nature |
EASEA-general environment apathy rotated factor matrix.
| Items | Model 1 (using eigen value > 1) | Model 2 (as one factor) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | ||
| ECCANTH03 Environmental threats such as deforestation and ozone depletion have been exaggerated | .462 | .518 | |
| ECCANTH07, it seems to me that most conservationists are pessimistic and somewhat paranoid. | .535 | .594 | |
| ECCANTH09, I do not think the problem of depletion of natural resources is as bad as many people make it out to be | .692 | .651 | |
| ECCANTH10, I find it hard to get too concerned about environmental issues | .721 | .611 | |
| ECCANTH14, I do not feel that humans are dependent on nature to survive | .445 | .545 | |
| ECCANTH17, I don’t care about environmental problems | .746 | .549 | |
| ECCANTH18 I’m opposed to programs to preserve wilderness, reduce pollution, and conserve resources | .683 | .591 | |
Extraction Method: Principal Axis Factoring. Rotation Method: Varimax with Kaiser Normalization.
AIS rotated factor matrix.
| Factor | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
| AI01_AnimUse Keeping animals for the production of food or clothing | .490 | ||||||
| AI02_AnimUse Keeping animals as pets | .447 | ||||||
| AI04_AnimUse Using animals for work | .624 | ||||||
| AI05_AnimUse Using animals for entertainment or sports | .654 | ||||||
| AI08_Intgrty De-sexing by hormone implants | .542 | ||||||
| AI09_Intgrty Removal of a body part, such as tail docking or de-clawing | .662 | ||||||
| AI10_Intgrty Marking animals by branding or ear notching | .589 | ||||||
| AI11_Intgrty Removal of dead tissue, such as hair/wool removal or foot trimming | .557 | ||||||
| AI14_Kill Using animals for products after their natural death | .439 | ||||||
| AI16_Kill Euthanizing healthy and unwanted pets because of overpopulation | .556 | ||||||
| AI17_Welfare Depriving animals of their needs for food and water | .768 | ||||||
| AI18_Welfare Depriving animals of an appropriate environment to rest, including shelter | .765 | ||||||
| AI19_Welfare Inflicting pain, injury, or disease on animals | .798 | ||||||
| AI20_Welfare Not providing sufficient space, proper facilities and company needed for animals | .701 | ||||||
| AI21_Welfare Subjecting animals to conditions and treatment which cause mental suffering | .501 | ||||||
| AI24_Xprmnt Medical experiments using animals to improve human health | .553 | ||||||
| AI25_Xprmnt Testing cosmetics or household products on animals | .636 | ||||||
| AI26_Xprmnt Operating on living animals for the benefits of human medicine research | .755 | ||||||
| AI27_Genchng Increasing animals’ reproductive or productive capabilities by genetic changes, e.g. cows producing more milk | .633 | ||||||
| AI28_Genchng Increasing animals’ health or disease resistance by genetic changes | .693 | ||||||
| AI29_Genchng Creating farm animals that are more profitable because they feel happy with little stimulation and have little desire to be active | .749 | ||||||
| AI30_Genchng Genetic selection of pet animals, such as dogs and cats, to increase their rarity, potential for showing or pedigree value | .600 | ||||||
| AI34_EnvIss Controlling wildlife populations by killing | .542 | ||||||
| AI35_EnvIss Controlling animal populations by sterilization | .439 | ||||||
| AI36_EnvIss Destroying the habitat of endangered animal species | .596 | ||||||
| AI37_EnvIss Destroying the habitat of non-endangered animal species to develop and promote urbanization or crops to feed humans | .465 | ||||||
| AI39_SocAtt Considering some animal species as sacred or good luck symbols or totems | .606 | ||||||
| AI40_SocAtt Considering some animal species as evil or bad luck | .765 | ||||||
| AI41_SocAtt Parents displaying cruel treatment of animals in front of their children | .591 | ||||||
| AI42_SocAtt Inflicting pain or injury on animals as part of cultural traditions | .570 | ||||||
| AI43_SocAtt Cloning animals for human benefit | .435 | ||||||
Extraction Method: Principal Axis Factoring. Rotation Method: Varimax with Kaiser Normalization.
Skewness and kurtosis value of main variables.
| N | Skewness | Kurtosis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Statistic | Statistic | Std. Error | Statistic | Std. Error | |
| General Environmental Apathy (GEA) | 657 | .325 | .095 | -.154 | .190 |
| AIS | 657 | .364 | .095 | .755 | .190 |
| Animal use subscale | 657 | -.036 | .095 | .208 | .190 |
| Integrity destruction | 657 | .470 | .095 | .318 | .190 |
| Killing animal and animal welfare deprivation | 657 | .759 | .095 | .444 | .190 |
| Animal experimentation | 657 | -.190 | .095 | -.029 | .190 |
| Genotype change | 657 | -.435 | .095 | .446 | .190 |
| Harm animal for environmental issue | 657 | .394 | .095 | -.067 | .190 |
| Societal attitude toward animal. | 657 | .547 | .095 | .212 | .190 |
| ROS Intrinsic Personal (IP) | 657 | -.620 | .095 | .427 | .190 |
| ROS_Extrinsic Social (ES) | 657 | .162 | .095 | -.579 | .190 |
| Valid N (listwise) | 657 | ||||
ROS rotated factor matrix.
| Factor | ||
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | |
| ROS01 (IP) I try hard to live all my life according to my religious beliefs | .673 | |
| ROS03 (IP) I have often had a strong sense of God’s presence | .608 | |
| ROS04 (IP) My whole approach to life is based on my religion | .705 | |
| ROS05 (IP) Prayers I say when I’m alone are as important as those I say in church | .577 | |
| ROS06 (IP) I attend church once a week or more | .358 | |
| ROS07 (IP) My religion is important because it answers many questions about the meaning of life | .741 | |
| ROS08 (IP) I enjoy reading about my religion | .750 | |
| ROS09 (IP) It is important to me to spend time in private thought and prayer | .630 | |
| ROS10 (EP) What religion offers me most is comfort in times of trouble and sorrow | .665 | |
| ROS11 (EP) Prayer is for peace and happiness | .764 | |
| ROS12 (EP) I pray mainly to gain relief and protection | .622 | |
| ROS13 (ES) I go to church because it helps me make friends | .833 | |
| ROS14 (ES) I go to church mainly because I enjoy seeing people, I know there | .894 | |
| ROS15 (ES) I go to church mostly to spend time with my friends | .787 | |
Extraction Method: Principal Axis Factoring. Rotation Method: Varimax with Kaiser Normalization.
Descriptive statistics and measurement characteristics for variables.
| Variable | Scale description | Number of items | Reliability | Mean | SD |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ROS-Intrinsic Personal (IP) | 5-point Likert-like | 11 | 0.88 | 4.23 | 0.53 |
| ROS-Extrinsic social (ES) | 5-point Likert-like | 3 | 0.87 | 2.82 | 1.01 |
| General Environment Apathy (GEA) | 5-point Likert-like | 7 | 0.77 | 2.55 | 0.72 |
| Animal Issue Scale (AIS) | 5-point Likert-like | 31 | 0.92 | 2.57 | 0.53 |
| Animal use | 5-point Likert-like | 4 | 0.66 | 3.13 | 0.66 |
| Integrity destruction | 5-point Likert-like | 4 | 0.78 | 2.43 | 0.80 |
| Killing-welfare deprivation | 5-point Likert-like | 7 | 0.88 | 2.12 | 0.78 |
| Experiment | 5-point Likert-like | 3 | 0.82 | 3.01 | 0.85 |
| Genetic change | 5-point Likert-like | 4 | 0.80 | 3.30 | 0.74 |
| Harm for environmental issues | 5-point Likert-like | 4 | 0.75 | 2.40 | 0.80 |
| Harm for social issues | 5-point Likert-like | 5 | 0.84 | 2.15 | 0.78 |
N = 657.
Correlation matrix between EASEA components.
| GEA | AIS | |
|---|---|---|
| General Environment Apathy (GEA) | ||
| Acceptability for harming animals (AIS) | .335 |
N = 657
**Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (2-tailed)
*Correlation is significant at the 0.05 level (2-tailed).
One-way anova between subject effects tests.
| Source | Dependent Variable | Type III Sum of Squares | df | Mean Square | F | Sig. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Priming narratives | GEA | 5.883 | 2 | 2.942 | 5.707 | .003 |
| AIS | 3.417 | 2 | 1.708 | 6.132 | .002 | |
| AIS-Integrity destruction (AIS-ID) | 6.808 | 2 | 3.404 | 5.411 | .005 | |
| AIS-Kill animal and welfare deprivation (AIS-KW) | 3.724 | 2 | 1.862 | 3.048 | .048 | |
| AIS-Harm animal for environment issue (AIS-HEI) | 6.252 | 2 | 3.126 | 4.890 | .008 | |
| Intrinsic personal religious orientation (IP) | 1.218 | 2 | .609 | 2.145 | .118 | |
| Extrinsic social religious orientation (ES) | 2.067 | 2 | 1.034 | 1.017 | .362 |
NSN = 148, NDN = 188, NNN = 321, Total N = 657, For a more detailed results see S5 File, Manova, Tables 1–4.
Bonferroni post-hoc test between stewardship and dominance narrative group treatment.
| Dependent Variable | (I) Priming Narration | (J) Priming Narration | Mean Difference (I-J) | Std. Error | Sig. | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower Bound | Upper Bound | ||||||
| GEA | Stewardship (1) | Human domination (2) | -.1902 | .07890 | .049 | -.3795 | -.0008 |
| No Narration (3) | -.2391 | .07133 | .003 | -.4103 | -.0678 | ||
| Human domination (2) | No Narration (3) | -.0489 | .06594 | 1.000 | -.2071 | .1094 | |
| AIS | Stewardship (1) | Human domination (2) | -.1993 | .05801 | .002 | -.3386 | -.0601 |
| No Narration (3) | -.1393 | .05245 | .024 | -.2652 | -.0134 | ||
| Human domination (2) | No Narration (3) | .0600 | .04848 | .648 | -.0563 | .1764 | |
| AIS-ID | Stewardship (1) | Human domination (2) | -.2681 | .08716 | .007 | -.4773 | -.0589 |
| No Narration (3) | -.2222 | .07880 | .015 | -.4114 | -.0331 | ||
| Human domination (2) | No Narration (3) | .0458 | .07284 | 1.000 | -.1290 | .2207 | |
| AIS-KW | Stewardship (1) | Human domination (2) | -.1967 | .08589 | .067 | -.4028 | .0095 |
| No Narration (3) | -.1664 | .07766 | .098 | -.3528 | .0200 | ||
| Human domination (2) | No Narration (3) | .0303 | .07178 | 1.000 | -.1420 | .2026 | |
| AIS-HEI | Stewardship (1) | Human domination (2) | -.2729 | .08785 | .006 | -.4838 | -.0621 |
| No Narration (3) | -.1753 | .07943 | .083 | -.3659 | .0154 | ||
| Human domination (2) | No Narration (3) | .0976 | .07342 | .552 | -.0786 | .2739 | |
Based on observed means. The error term is Mean Square (Error) = 1.016. For a more detailed results see S5 File, Manova, Table 4.
*. The mean difference is significant at the .05 level.
Fig 1Differences between various priming narration group treatment.
Main variables with demographic and other important determinants to GEA.
| GEA | Effect size | CI (95%) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| b | Std. B | Lower | Upper | |||||
| Model 1: Main variables | ||||||||
| R = 0.386 | (Constant) | 3.55 |
| 3.12 | 3.98 | |||
| R2 = 0.149 | Stewardship priming narrative group | -0.24 | -0.14 |
| 0.33D | + | -0.37 | -0.11 |
| df = 4, 652 | ROS Personal | -0.35 | -0.26 |
| 0.07 | + | -0.44 | -0.25 |
| ROS Social | 0.19 | 0.27 |
| 0.08 | + | 0.14 | 0.24 | |
| Model 2: Main variables with demographic and other determinants | ||||||||
| R = 0.465 | (Constant) | 3.14 |
| 2.33 | 3.95 | |||
| R2 = 0.216 | ROS Personal | -0.29 | -0.21 |
| 0.04 | + | -0.41 | -0.16 |
| df = 39, 402 | ROS Social | 0.14 | 0.21 |
| 0.04 | + | 0.08 | 0.21 |
| How often do you consume meat in a week | 0.39 | 0.14 |
| 0.02 | 0.12 | 0.66 | ||
| Stewardship priming narrative group | -0.17 | -0.10 |
| 0.33D | + | -0.34 | -0.00 | |
Unsignificant result omitted. For full results see S6 File, -Multiple regression Tables 1 to 2.
*p < .05
**p < .01
Aregression using enter method in a stepwise manner
Bregression using enter method
Ceffect-size calculation using eta squared (F2); Deffect-size calculation using Hedge’s g; +small effect size F2> = 0.02 (or in some cases of categorical dummy variable, using Cohen’s D/Hedges’g > = 0.2)
++medium effect size F2> = 0.15 (or in some cases of categorical dummy variable, using cohen’s D/Hedges’g > = 0.5)
1compared to respondents who fill the survey without having to read any narrative
2compared to respondent who eat meat once a week
Main variables with other important determinants to AIS.
| AIS | Effect size | CI (95%) | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| b | Std. B | Lower | Upper | |||||
| Model 1: Main variables | ||||||||
| R = 0.339 | (Constant) | 3.18 |
| 2.85 | 3.50 | |||
| R2 = 0.115 | Stewardship priming narrative group | -0.14 | -0.11 |
| 0.27 | + | -0.24 | -0.04 |
| df = 4, 652 | ROS Personal | -0.22 | -0.22 |
| 0.05 | + | -0.29 | -0.15 |
| ROS Social | 0.12 | 0.23 |
| 0.05 | + | 0.08 | 0.16 | |
| Model 2: Main variables with demographic and other determinants | ||||||||
| R = 0.469 | (Constant) | 2.67 |
| 2.10 | 3.25 | |||
| R2 = 0.22 | ROS Personal | -0.22 | -0.23 |
| 0.05 | + | -0.31 | -0.13 |
| df = 39, 402 | ROS Social | 0.09 | 0.18 |
| 0.03 | + | 0.04 | 0.14 |
| How often do you consume meat in a week | 0.35 | 0.17 |
| 0.02 | + | 0.15 | 0.54 | |
| What is the highest level of schooling you have completed | 0.43 | 0.15 |
| 0.02 | 0.14 | 0.71 | ||
| In what sort of house do you live | 0.58 | 0.14 |
| 0.01 | 0.16 | 0.99 | ||
| What is the highest level of schooling you have completed | 0.18 | 0.16 |
| 0.01 | 0.05 | 0.32 | ||
| What is your gross household expenses per month | -0.69 | -0.09 |
| 0.01 | -1.35 | -0.02 | ||
Unsignificant result omitted. For full results see S6 File, -Multiple regression Tables 1 to 2.
*p < .05
**p < .01
Aregression using enter method in a stepwise manner
Bregression using enter method
Ceffect-size calculation using eta squared (F2)
Deffect-size calculation using Hedge’s g
+small effect size F2> = 0.02 (or in some cases of categorical dummy variable, using Cohen’s D/Hedges’g > = 0.2); ++medium effect size F2> = 0.15 (or in some cases of categorical dummy variable, using cohen’s D/Hedges’g > = 0.5)
1compared to respondents who fill the survey without having to read any narrative
2compared to respondent who eat meat once a week
3compared to respondent with master/PhD
4compared to respondent who is still live with their parents; 5compared to those respondents whose expenses is below IDR five millions a month.