Continuities and discontinuities in the cultural evolution of global consciousness

Author:

Zhang Robert Jiqi1,Liu James H.2ORCID,Lee Michelle2,Lin Mei-hua3,Xie Tian4,Chen Sylvia Xiaohua5,Leung Angela K.-y.6,Lee I-Ching7,Hodgetts Darrin2,Valdes Evan A.2ORCID,Choi Sarah Y.2

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, Nanjing Normal University, People's Republic of China

2. School of Psychology, Massey University, 0745, New Zealand

3. Department of Psychology, Sunway University, Selangor, Malaysia

4. Department of Psychology, Philosophy School, Wuhan University, People's Republic of China

5. Department of Applied Social Sciences, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, People's Republic of China

6. School of Social Sciences, Management University, Singapore

7. Department of Psychology, National Taiwan University, Taiwan

Abstract

Global consciousness (GC), encompassing cosmopolitan orientation, global orientations (i.e. openness to multicultural experiences) and identification with all humanity, is a relatively stable individual difference that is strongly associated with pro-environmental attitudes and behaviours, less ingroup favouritism and prejudice, and greater pandemic prevention safety behaviours. Little is known about how it is socialized in everyday life. Using stratified samples from six societies, socializing institution factors correlating positively with GC were education, white collar work (and its higher income) and religiosity. However, GC also decreased with increasing age, contradicting a ‘wisdom of elders’ transmission of social learning, and not replicating typical findings that general prosociality increases with age. Longitudinal findings were that empathy-building, network-enhancing elements like getting married or welcoming a new infant, increased GC the most across a three-month interval. Instrumental gains like receiving a promotion (or getting a better job) also showed positive effects. Less intuitively, death of a close-other enhanced rather than reduced GC. Perhaps this was achieved through the ritualized management of meaning where a sense of the smallness of self is associated with growth of empathy for the human condition, as a more discontinuous or opportunistic form of culture-based learning. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Evolution and sustainability: gathering the strands for an Anthropocene synthesis’.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference59 articles.

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3. Cultural Evolution: A Review of Theory, Findings and Controversies

4. Liu JH, Pratto F. 2018 Colonization, decolonization, and power: Ruptures and transformations out of dominance. In The Oxford handbook of social justice and social psychology (eds P. Hammack), pp. 261-280. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

5. Towards a Psychology of Global Consciousness Through an Ethical Conception of Self in Society

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