Children Who Choose Not to Eat Meat: A Study of Early Moral Decision-making

被引:53
|
作者
Hussar, Karen M. [1 ]
Harris, Paul L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Harvard Univ, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
关键词
morality; commitment; vegetarianism; tolerance; JUDGMENTS; ADOLESCENTS; RELATIVISM; VEGETARIAN; TOLERANCE; BELIEFS; SPEECH;
D O I
10.1111/j.1467-9507.2009.00547.x
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
Can young children frame their own choices in terms of moral considerations, particularly when those choices do not match the practices of immediate authority figures? To answer this question, we studied 6- to 10-year-old independent vegetarians-children who have elected to become vegetarians, despite being raised in non-vegetarian families. In Study 1, these children were asked about their reasons for not eating meat; their replies were compared with those made by vegetarian children from vegetarian families (family vegetarians) and non-vegetarian children from non-vegetarian families (non-vegetarians). Unlike the other two groups, independent vegetarians universally focused on the suffering that meat eating implies for animals but, surprisingly, they did not condemn others for meat eating. Study 2 attempted to explain this tolerance by examining if children focus on whether an individual has made a commitment to not eating meat. All three groups of children condemned meat eating by morally committed vegetarians, but not by those who have made no such commitment. The two studies show that independent vegetarians are committed to not eating meat on moral grounds and judge that it would be wrong to break that commitment. Nevertheless, like non-vegetarian children, they remain tolerant toward people who have made no such commitment.
引用
收藏
页码:627 / 641
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] To choose or not to choose? A study on decision-making for virtual reality intervention in children with ADHD
    Ding, Jie
    Gan, Feng
    HUMANITIES & SOCIAL SCIENCES COMMUNICATIONS, 2025, 12 (01):
  • [2] Who Should We Choose to Sacrifice, Self or Pedestrian? Evaluating Moral Decision-Making in Virtual Reality
    Wang, Huarong
    Li, Dongqian
    Wang, Zhenhang
    Song, Jian
    Gao, Zhan
    Schwebel, David C.
    ENGINEERING PSYCHOLOGY AND COGNITIVE ERGONOMICS, EPCE 2023, PT II, 2023, 14018 : 560 - 572
  • [3] Moral Decision-Making in Organizations
    Kouchaki, Maryam
    Smith, Isaac H.
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY AND ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR, 2025, 12 : 45 - 72
  • [4] Confidence in Moral Decision-Making
    Schooler, Lydia
    Okhan, Mesude
    Hollander, Sara
    Gill, Maureen
    Zoh, Yoonseo
    Crockett, M. J.
    Yu, Hongbo
    COLLABRA-PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 10 (01)
  • [5] The church and moral decision-making
    Vorster, J. M.
    HTS TEOLOGIESE STUDIES-THEOLOGICAL STUDIES, 2017, 73 (03):
  • [6] DECISION-MAKING FOR CHILDREN WITH DISABILITIES parental discretion and moral ambiguity
    Diekema, Douglas S.
    Wilfond, Benjamin S.
    PERSPECTIVES IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2015, 58 (03) : 328 - 331
  • [7] Children's utilization of emotion expectancies in moral decision-making
    Hertz, Steven G.
    Krettenauer, Tobias
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2014, 32 (03) : 367 - 373
  • [8] Children's Eyewitness Identification as Implicit Moral Decision-Making
    Spring, Toni
    Saltzstein, Herbert D.
    Peach, Roger
    APPLIED COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 2013, 27 (02) : 139 - 149
  • [9] A field study of entrepreneurial decision-making and moral imagination
    McVea, John F.
    JOURNAL OF BUSINESS VENTURING, 2009, 24 (05) : 491 - 504
  • [10] Moral imagination and management decision-making: An empirical study
    Mahmood, Sobia
    Ali, Bakhtiar
    AFRICAN JOURNAL OF BUSINESS MANAGEMENT, 2011, 5 (04): : 1466 - 1480