Replication Data for: Language Shapes People’s Time Perspective and Support for Future-Oriented Policies
收藏DataONE2018-12-11 更新2024-06-08 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:5bb6af4b0dedaa11b2b0ed9740051f51e2f0ce901f8d887a5a9dc9c96ea47a99
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Can the way we speak affect the way we perceive time and think about politics? Languages vary by how much they require speakers to grammatically encode temporal differences. Futureless tongues (e.g., Estonian) do not oblige speakers to distinguish between the present and future tense, while futured tongues do (e.g., Russian). By grammatically conflating “today” and “tomorrow,” we hypothesize that speakers of futureless tongues will view the future as temporally closer to the present, causing them to discount the future less and support future-oriented policies more. Using an original survey experiment that randomly assigned the interview language to Estonian/Russian bilinguals, we find support for this proposition and document the absence of this language effect when a policy has no obvious time referent. We then replicate and extend our principal result through a cross-national analysis of survey data. Our results imply that language may have significant consequences for mass opinion.
创建时间:
2023-11-21



