
"Ecospirituality: The Psychology of Moral Concern for Nature"
Matthew I. Billet, Adam Baimel, Sakshi S. Sahakari, Mark Schaller, and Ara Norenzayan
People across time and cultures have often conceived of nature, and humanity’s connection to it, as essentially spiritual. Yet the psychological literature about this “ecospiritual” orientation has been meager. In eight samples, recruited from the USA, Canada, UK, and Singapore (Total N = 8795), Billet et al. investigated the relationship between ecospirituality and moral concern for nature. They developed and validated an 8-item measure of ecospirituality for this purpose. Ecospirituality, over and above environmental attitudes, environmentalist identity, and political orientation, uniquely predicted several aspects of moral concern for nature, such as including nature in one’s moral circle, treating nature as a sacred value, and endorsing a reasoning style that places importance on principles and duties to nature. This reasoning style was reflected in decisions involving nature-economic trade-offs, as well as in an unconditional voting style for the Green Party. The authors discuss how a spiritual view of nature is an important component of the moral psychology of the human-nature relationship, and what implications it might have for interventions aimed at increasing sustainability.