Dark green humility: religious, psychological, and affective attributes of proenvironmental behaviors

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Abstract

Through a novel survey instrument, we examined traits and characteristics that various scholars and observers have averred promote or hinder proenvironmental behaviors. We found that those who hold anthropocentric and monotheistic religious views, and express low levels of environmental, religious, and cosmic humility, are less likely to engage in proenvironmental behaviors than those who maintain views, or express affinity with affective traits, values, and spiritual understandings, that are ecocentric, Organicist/Gaian, pantheistic, animistic, and that in general reflect humility about the human place in the world.

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Taylor, B., Wright, J., & LeVasseur, T. (2020). Dark green humility: religious, psychological, and affective attributes of proenvironmental behaviors. Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences, 10(1), 41–56. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13412-019-00578-5

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