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The Relationship between Systems Thinking and the New Ecological Paradigm
119
Citations
39
References
2015
Year
Ecological WorldviewCognitive Paradigm SystemsEngineeringSystem ThinkingSocial-ecological SystemSocial SciencesSystem TheoryEcological PsychologyEcology (Indigenous Studies)Systems ThinkingEcology (Ecological Sciences)System EcologyCognitive ScienceEnvironmental KnowledgeSocial EcologySustainable SystemsSustainabilityNew Ecological ParadigmPhilosophy Of Mind
The study examined the relationship between systems thinking and the New Ecological Paradigm. A survey of 115 psychology undergraduates measured systems thinking, ecological worldview, environmental values, nature connectivity, and environmental behaviors. Results showed that higher systems thinking scores were associated with a stronger ecological worldview, greater nature connectivity, biospheric values, more pro‑environmental behaviors, and that systems thinking both predicted and was predicted by the New Ecological Paradigm, while also enhancing understanding of system membership and the interplay between ecological and socio‑economic systems. © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
The goal of the present research was to examine the relationship between the cognitive paradigm systems thinking and an ecologically informed worldview, specifically the New Ecological Paradigm. One hundred and fifteen psychology undergraduate students completed an online questionnaire assessing systems thinking, ecological worldview, environmental value‐orientation, connectivity to nature, and environmental behaviors. Results demonstrated that systems thinkers possess a stronger ecological worldview and sense of connectivity with nature, harbour biospheric environmental values, and engage in more pro‐environmental behaviors than those scoring low on systems thinking. Furthermore, it was found that systems thinking both uniquely predicted and was predicted by the New Ecological Paradigm. Moreover, results demonstrated that systems thinkers are better able to acknowledge ‘system membership’ and possess a greater understanding of the characteristics of complex ecological systems and their mutual influence on social‐economic domains. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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