Ethics Classes Can Influence Student Behavior: Students Purchase Less Meat after Discussing Arguments for Vegetarianism
by Eric Schwitzgebel, Bradford Cokelet, and Peter Singer
[poster presentation for the Society for Philosophy and Psychology, 2019 meeting]
All data and analyses are tentative, pending final checks and peer review.
Rationale
Work by Haidt (2012) and Schwitzgebel & Rust (2016) suggests that philosophical ethical argumentation might have little influence on real-world moral behavior.
However, to our knowledge there are no existing ecologically valid studies of the influence of university-level philosophy classes on non-laboratory, non-self-reported moral behavior.
Participants
1143 undergraduates in four large lower-division classes at U.C. Riverside.
Design
Half of students were required to read a philosophy article defending vegetarianism (Rachels 2004), followed by a group discussion section and an optional advocacy video.
The other half received similar materials and discussion on charitable giving.
Opinion Measure
Later that week, students received an anonymous questionnaire asking their opinion about four moral issues.
The target question was “Eating the meat of factory farmed animals is unethical” with response options from “strongly agree” (+3) to “strongly disagree” (-3).
Behavioral Measure
We examined campus dining card purchase data for 5,981 campus food purchases from 476 students for whom data were available.
Only purchases of at least $4.99 were included.
Purchases were coded as either vegetarian or non-vegetarian.
Results: Opinion
In the meat ethics group, 43% of respondents agreed (+1 to +3) that eating the meat of factory farmed animals is unethical, compared to 29% in the charitable giving control group (z = 5.0, p < .001; mean +0.12 vs -0.46, t(1029) = 5.6, p < .001).
Responses to other ethical questions, including one about charitable giving, did not differ between the groups.
Results: Purchase Behavior
In the control group, 52% of purchases included meat, both before and after the discussion section.
In the meat ethics group, meat purchases declined from 52% to 45% (z = 3.3, p = .001).
Participant-by-participant among students with purchases both before and after the discussion:
The control group averaged 53% meat purchases both before and after.
The meat ethics group averaged 56% meat purchases before and 45% after (paired t(162) = 4.3, p < .001).