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Don't Mind Meat? The Denial of Mind to Animals Used for Human Consumption

 
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Short Description:
Researchers conducted three studies to examine how the mind—both beliefs about animal minds and the mental work necessary to create a shift between food animals and other animals—allows for people to simultaneously love animals and eat meat.

Abstract:
Article Abstract:

"Many people like eating meat, but most are reluctant to harm things that have minds. The current three studies show that this dissonance motivates people to deny minds to animals. Study 1 demonstrates that animals considered appropriate for human consumption are ascribed diminished mental capacities. Study 2 shows that meat eaters are motivated to deny minds to food animals when they are reminded of the link between meat and animal suffering. Finally, Study 3 provides direct support for our dissonance hypothesis, showing that expectations regarding the immediate consumption of meat increase mind denial. Moreover, this mind denial in turn reduces negative affect associated with dissonance. The findings highlight the role of dissonance reduction in facilitating the practice of meat eating and protecting cultural commitments."


Spot Check Number: 1870
Sponsor: The University of Queensland, University of Kent, University of Melbourne
Researcher/Author: Brock Bastian, Steve Loughnan, Nick Haslam & Helena R. M. Radke
Animal Type: Various
Record Type: Academic Paper, Journal Article, Online Reference
Research Method: Experimental/Modeling/Applications, Print Survey
Geographic Region: International, Worldwide
Number of Participants: 265
Population Descriptors: College students, meat eaters, Australia
Year Conducted: 2011
File Attachments: You must be logged in to access attachments (see login and registration links above)

PDF

Here's the full article http://www2.psy.uq.edu.au/~uqbbast1/Bastian%20et%20al%20PSPB%20in%20press.pdf

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