World beliefs predict self-reported sustainable behaviors beyond Big Five personality traits and political ideology
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Hämpke, Janna
Kerry, Nicholas
Clifton, Jeremy D. W.
Abstract / Description
Generalized beliefs about the world—termed ‘primal world beliefs’ or ‘primals’—have been hypothesized to affect behavior, since they contain information which influences the perceived costs, benefits, and justifications for different behaviors. For example, people who see the world as highly improvable may view prosocial behaviors as having more benefits and therefore be more inclined to work harder on making things better. Three preregistered studies (N = 1,534 US participants) investigated the relationship between primals and several measures of people’s propensity toward sustainable behavior. Beliefs that the world is less hierarchical, but more improvable, cooperative, harmless, meaningful, and abundant were weakly to moderately associated with self-reported ethically-minded consumer behavior, pro-environmental behavior, and behavioral intentions. These relationships were largely robust to controlling for Big Five traits and political ideology, although some of the relationships were subsumed by the more general belief that the world is good. Changes in two world beliefs (cooperative, harmless) over a three-week period weakly predicted pro-environmental behavior intentions when controlling for people’s previously reported pro-environmental behavior. These correlational findings suggest some possible avenues for future research: if these beliefs are found to be causally prior to environmental attitudes, they may offer a promising target for interventions aimed at increasing sustainable behavior.
Keyword(s)
sustainable behavior primal world beliefs primals pro-environmental behavior ethical-minded consumer behaviorPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2025-02-21
Journal title
Global Environmental Psychology
Volume
3
Article number
Article e12057
Publisher
PsychOpen GOLD
Publication status
publishedVersion
Review status
peerReviewed
Is version of
Citation
Hämpke, J., Kerry, N., & Clifton, J. D. W. (2025). World beliefs predict self-reported sustainable behaviors beyond Big Five personality traits and political ideology. Global Environmental Psychology, 3, Article e12057. https://doi.org/10.5964/gep.12057
-
gep.v3.12057.pdfAdobe PDF - 666.49KBMD5 : 81dbf1e65d985d07e5027dd1676415d4
-
There are no other versions of this object.
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Hämpke, Janna
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Kerry, Nicholas
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Clifton, Jeremy D. W.
-
PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2025-04-25T11:32:48Z
-
Made available on2025-04-25T11:32:48Z
-
Date of first publication2025-02-21
-
Abstract / DescriptionGeneralized beliefs about the world—termed ‘primal world beliefs’ or ‘primals’—have been hypothesized to affect behavior, since they contain information which influences the perceived costs, benefits, and justifications for different behaviors. For example, people who see the world as highly improvable may view prosocial behaviors as having more benefits and therefore be more inclined to work harder on making things better. Three preregistered studies (N = 1,534 US participants) investigated the relationship between primals and several measures of people’s propensity toward sustainable behavior. Beliefs that the world is less hierarchical, but more improvable, cooperative, harmless, meaningful, and abundant were weakly to moderately associated with self-reported ethically-minded consumer behavior, pro-environmental behavior, and behavioral intentions. These relationships were largely robust to controlling for Big Five traits and political ideology, although some of the relationships were subsumed by the more general belief that the world is good. Changes in two world beliefs (cooperative, harmless) over a three-week period weakly predicted pro-environmental behavior intentions when controlling for people’s previously reported pro-environmental behavior. These correlational findings suggest some possible avenues for future research: if these beliefs are found to be causally prior to environmental attitudes, they may offer a promising target for interventions aimed at increasing sustainable behavior.en_US
-
Publication statuspublishedVersion
-
Review statuspeerReviewed
-
CitationHämpke, J., Kerry, N., & Clifton, J. D. W. (2025). World beliefs predict self-reported sustainable behaviors beyond Big Five personality traits and political ideology. Global Environmental Psychology, 3, Article e12057. https://doi.org/10.5964/gep.12057
-
ISSN2750-6630
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/11668
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.16256
-
Language of contenteng
-
PublisherPsychOpen GOLD
-
Is version ofhttps://doi.org/10.5964/gep.12057
-
Keyword(s)sustainable behavioren_US
-
Keyword(s)primal world beliefsen_US
-
Keyword(s)primalsen_US
-
Keyword(s)pro-environmental behavioren_US
-
Keyword(s)ethical-minded consumer behavioren_US
-
Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
-
TitleWorld beliefs predict self-reported sustainable behaviors beyond Big Five personality traits and political ideologyen_US
-
DRO typearticle
-
Article numberArticle e12057
-
Journal titleGlobal Environmental Psychology
-
Volume3
-
Visible tag(s)Version of Record