Underlying Dimensions of Ecocentric and Anthropocentric Environmental Beliefs

  • María Amérigo
  • Juan Ignacio Aragonés
  • Belinda De Frutos
  • Verónica Sevillano
  • Beatriz Cortés
Palabras clave: Environmental beliefs, Anthropocentrism, Ecocentrism, Self in nature

Resumen

This study focuses on the cognitive components of general environmental attitudes. Taking as a starting point the scale of Thompson and Barton (1994) to identify ecocentric and anthropocentric motives in environmental conservation, the beliefs that guide attitudes in the person-environment relationship are analyzed. Confirmatory factor analysis was used to contrast the tripartite structure of these beliefs—based on egoistic, socioaltruistic, and biospheric aspects—with a two dimensional structure that confronts ecocentric and anthropocentric orientations. The results obtained from two samples, a student sample (n = 212) and a sample from the general population of Madrid (n = 205), indicate the existence of a three dimensional structure of environmental beliefs: an anthropocentric dimension based on the instrumental value of the environment for human beings, a biospheric dimension that values the environment for its own sake, and, lastly, an egobiocentric dimension that values the human being within nature as a whole.

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Publicado
2007-05-11
Cómo citar
Amérigo M., Aragonés J. I. ., Frutos B. D. ., Sevillano V. . y Cortés B. . (2007). Underlying Dimensions of Ecocentric and Anthropocentric Environmental Beliefs. The Spanish Journal of Psychology, 10(1), 97-103. https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/SJOP/article/view/SJOP0707120097A
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