Animals and Cognitive Dissonance
Tags:: #Vegan_Blog
What is Cognitive Dissonance?
Cognitive Dissonance
[หkรคษกnษdiv หdisษnษns]
NOUN
psychology
Cognitive Dissonance is the perception of contradictory information. The state has inconsistent thoughts, beliefs, or attitudes, especially relating to behavioral decisions and attitude change.
It can be felt in many ways such as anxiety, depression, or anger. It can also be because of the lack of knowledge about the subject, which can cause a person to become biased.
History of Cognitive Dissonance
The term cognitive dissonance was coined in the year 1957 by American psychologist Leon Festinger. Cognitive dissonance appears in many aspects of human behavior.
An example is a person who knows that smoking cigarette is bad and can cause cancer, its best to not smoke but, continues to smoke them anyway. Another one can be a person who knows that exercising is good for health but continues to live a sedentary life. When this internal discomfort is brought to light people justify their thoughts in different ways. For the examples above, โI donโt smoke that much!โ and โIโm too busy to exercise.โ
Cognitive Dissonance When It Comes To Animals
For the case of animal โloversโย who love to eat meat, the dissonance they experience is similar. They justify killing some animals while loving others. Many meat-eaters suffer from cognitive dissonance. What they actually mean when they say, โI love animalsโ is only a few species of animals, like cats and dogs.
People often justify their eating animals with things like, โThe animals I eat are bred for that purposeโ, โThey do feel painโ, โWe need to eat animals to stay healthyโ or, even something really stupid as โWhat will happen to the farmers if we all stop eating animals?!โ
When someone puts forth these arguments it only shows just how unaware they are about animals, the environment, etc. As a vegan, I can say that the discomfort they feel is important for them to change. Some people will act quickly and learn more some will take more time and still never change. Pointing out the cognitive dissonance is the beginning of the change for many.
A study showing how meat-eating reduces moral concern for animals in an attempt to justify eating meat vs how eating vegetables, nuts, seeds increases it. This study shows how cognitive dissonance can be cemented by just the food we eat.