Institute of Psychology, University of Wroclaw, ul. Dawida 1, 50-527 Wroclaw, Poland.
Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, Russian Academy of Sciences, 119991, Leninsky pr. 32a, Moscow, Russia.
Appetite. 2018 Jun 1;125:124-130. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2017.12.031. Epub 2018 Feb 3.
People judge food wasting as an immoral behavior. Although moral concerns vary widely across cultures, to this date, food wasting moral judgments were investigated only among rich and industrialized ones. This study reports first evidence of cultural variability on moral judgments of food wasting between modern and traditional cultures. We conducted our study among the Maasai - pastoralists of Ngorongoro, Yali - horticulturalists of West Papua, and among citizens of Poland. According to the results, Maasai judge food wasting as more immoral compared to Yali and Poles. What's more, Yali judge food wasting harsher than Poles. These results suggest that there are cultural differences in moral judgments of food wasting. These differences might reflect the impact of unstable ecology on food economy of a given society. We hypothesize that harsh moral judgment concerning food waste may serve as a cultural adaptation for food insecurity.
人们将食物浪费视为一种不道德的行为。尽管道德观念在不同文化中存在广泛差异,但迄今为止,仅在富裕和工业化国家中研究了食物浪费的道德判断。本研究首次报告了现代文化和传统文化之间食物浪费道德判断的文化差异。我们在恩戈罗恩戈罗的马赛牧民、西巴布亚的雅利园艺师和波兰公民中进行了研究。结果表明,与雅利人和波兰人相比,马赛人认为食物浪费更不道德。更重要的是,雅利人对食物浪费的判断比波兰人更为严厉。这些结果表明,在食物浪费的道德判断上存在文化差异。这些差异可能反映了不稳定的生态对特定社会食物经济的影响。我们假设,对食物浪费的严厉道德判断可能是对食物不安全的一种文化适应。