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Belief in divine (versus human) control of earth affects perceived threat of climate change

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Belief in divine (versus human) control of earth affects perceived threat of climate change

J. V. Kane and S. L. Perry

Are your religious beliefs influencing your stance on climate change? This research by John V. Kane and Samuel L. Perry explores how beliefs in divine control affect skepticism towards climate science and policies. Discover how theology shapes attitudes towards climate action and the need for climate information.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Religious characteristics are predictive of Americans' skepticism toward climate-related science and policy. Though attributable to a variety of interrelated factors, we propose specific religious beliefs help explain the dynamic in part. Specifically, we theorize that belief in divine (versus human) control over Earth's climate likely engenders skepticism toward scientific claims that human behavior is leading Earth toward environmental crisis. Regression analyses with national survey data (N = 5321) demonstrate that believing "God would not allow humans to destroy the Earth" is associated with lower concern about climate change. Next, a pre-registered survey experiment (N = 3345) finds that manipulating belief in God's—vis-à-vis humans'—control of Earth's climate reduced the perceived severity of climate change and need for policy intervention. Our manipulation also reduced demand for climate-related information from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association. These results establish an important causal link between a religious belief and climate change attitudes in the U.S. public.
Publisher
npj Climate Action
Published On
Sep 14, 2024
Authors
John V. Kane, Samuel L. Perry
Tags
climate change
religious beliefs
theological beliefs
climate skepticism
policy intervention
climate information
concern
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