Unpalatable truths: commitment to eating meat is associated with strategic ignorance of food-animal minds
Unpalatable truths: commitment to eating meat is associated with strategic ignorance of food-animal minds
Animal minds are of central importance to debates about their rights and welfare. Remaining ignorant of evidence that animals have minds is therefore likely to facilitate their mistreatment. Studying samples of adults and students from the UK and US we found that, consistent with motivational perspectives on meat consumption, those who were more (vs. less) committed to eating meat were more motivated to avoid exposure to information about food-animals’ sentience (Studies 1), showed less interest in exposure to articles about intelligent food animals (Studies 2a and 2b), and were quicker to terminate exposure to internet pop-ups containing information about food-animals’ minds (Studies 3a and 3b). At the same time, those who were more (vs. less) committed to eating meat approached information about companion-animals’ minds (Studies 2a-3b) and unintelligent food animals (Studies 2a and 2b) in largely the same ways. The findings demonstrate that, within the UK and US, the desire to eat meat is associated with strategies to avoid information that is likely to challenge meat consumption.
Leach, Stefan
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Piazza, Jared
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Loughnan, Steve
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Sutton, Robbie M.
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Kapantai, Ioanna
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Dhont, Kristof
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Douglas, Karen M.
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20 January 2022
Leach, Stefan
6bdc5639-c135-46b8-bcf9-2dd00646ee9a
Piazza, Jared
d83fe90f-9e4a-490d-abb7-3230d422a600
Loughnan, Steve
1880fe6e-19c3-43c1-bada-9ae45af4f94b
Sutton, Robbie M.
c5c423f8-fc77-4778-9666-8fb0c1fc42b0
Kapantai, Ioanna
2cb67ea7-33b1-4b22-b69a-fecbda6b7e00
Dhont, Kristof
25b2d39a-2ad1-4546-b507-76f6aa5af01b
Douglas, Karen M.
eb14e5a5-c22a-415e-abde-42b25e39c256
Leach, Stefan, Piazza, Jared, Loughnan, Steve, Sutton, Robbie M., Kapantai, Ioanna, Dhont, Kristof and Douglas, Karen M.
(2022)
Unpalatable truths: commitment to eating meat is associated with strategic ignorance of food-animal minds.
Appetite, 171, [105935].
(doi:10.1016/j.appet.2022.105935).
Abstract
Animal minds are of central importance to debates about their rights and welfare. Remaining ignorant of evidence that animals have minds is therefore likely to facilitate their mistreatment. Studying samples of adults and students from the UK and US we found that, consistent with motivational perspectives on meat consumption, those who were more (vs. less) committed to eating meat were more motivated to avoid exposure to information about food-animals’ sentience (Studies 1), showed less interest in exposure to articles about intelligent food animals (Studies 2a and 2b), and were quicker to terminate exposure to internet pop-ups containing information about food-animals’ minds (Studies 3a and 3b). At the same time, those who were more (vs. less) committed to eating meat approached information about companion-animals’ minds (Studies 2a-3b) and unintelligent food animals (Studies 2a and 2b) in largely the same ways. The findings demonstrate that, within the UK and US, the desire to eat meat is associated with strategies to avoid information that is likely to challenge meat consumption.
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Accepted/In Press date: 12 January 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 January 2022
Published date: 20 January 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 503891
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/503891
ISSN: 0195-6663
PURE UUID: 8bfc16b7-d727-4b1f-80b9-9e9ada05515e
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Date deposited: 15 Aug 2025 16:48
Last modified: 16 Aug 2025 02:16
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Author:
Stefan Leach
Author:
Jared Piazza
Author:
Steve Loughnan
Author:
Robbie M. Sutton
Author:
Ioanna Kapantai
Author:
Kristof Dhont
Author:
Karen M. Douglas
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