homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Organic food might make people jerks

Well the title may be a little over the top, but Loyola University psychologist concluded that people with a taste for organics are more likely to be insufferable, and that a type of diet might make you more judgmental. The new study by Kendall Eskine claims that people who ate foods declared as organic tended […]

Mihai Andrei
May 23, 2012 @ 7:03 am

share Share

Well the title may be a little over the top, but Loyola University psychologist concluded that people with a taste for organics are more likely to be insufferable, and that a type of diet might make you more judgmental.

The new study by Kendall Eskine claims that people who ate foods declared as organic tended to judge other people more harshly than other people with regular diets. In order to reach this conclusion, Eskine, who says he routinely kicks participants out of his research projects, organized subjects into three groups: organic food eaters, comfort food eaters and a control group.

He then exposed a ‘needy stranger’ to the three groups and found that the comfort food group helped the stranger for 24 minutes, the control group for almost 20 minutes, and the organic food group only helped him out for 13 minutes. Eksine explained that this happened because the last group felt they did what they could and shouldn’t do anything more, calling this “moral licensing” – when people put their judgmental thoughts above the needs of others.

The idea that organic food, or any type of diet, could alter personality in such a way doesn’t come as quite a surprise to some, but it was deemed as preposterous by many; still, it is already well know that the self-righteous are more likely to be stressed out about food, as the study explains, so it’s only a stretch to say that organic food eaters are more likely to develop a “holier-than-than-thou” sense of superiority.

However, the downside of the study is that it doesn’t explain causality: it’s not clear if bad tempered people might be more tempted to be into organic foods, or if people who eat organic foods may become more bad tempered. Hopefully, Eksine will sort this out as soon as possible.

Via Food Safety News

share Share

Ronan the Sea Lion Can Keep a Beat Better Than You Can — and She Might Just Change What We Know About Music and the Brain

A rescued sea lion is shaking up what scientists thought they knew about rhythm and the brain

Giant Brain Study Took Seven Years to Test the Two Biggest Theories of Consciousness. Here's What Scientists Found

Both came up short but the search for human consciousness continues.

The Fat Around Your Thighs Might Be Affecting Your Mental Health

New research finds that where fat is stored—not just how much you have—might shape your mood.

Everyone else’s opinion is secretly changing yours (and that's huge for disinformation)

Public opinion may be swaying you a lot more than you think.

Magic Mushroom Use Is Soaring in the U.S. With More Americans Turning to Psilocybin Than Cocaine or Meth

Use is up across all age groups, with rising poison calls and shifting perceptions

What happens in your brain when your mind goes completely blank — neuroscientists say it's a distinct mental state

Mind blanking isn’t daydreaming. It's something more akin to meditation — but not quite the same.

Scientists Just Found the Clearest Evidence Yet That Lucid Dreaming Is a Real State of Consciousness

People who are aware they are dreaming show distinct brain patterns.

Scientists Invent a Color Humans Have Never Seen Before

Meet "olo": a vivid, hyper-saturated blue-green that can't be captured by screens or paint.

Conservative people in the US distrust science way more broadly than previously thought

Even chemistry gets side-eye now. Trust in science is crumbling across America's ideology.

Here's why you should stop working out before bedtime

Even hours before bedtime, workouts can be a problem.