Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2013
A climate that is too cold to grow crops for part of the year demands foresight and self-control skills. To the extent that a culture has developed intertemporal bargaining, its members will have more autonomy, but pay the cost of being more compulsive, than members of societies that have not. Monetary resources will be a consequence but will also be fed back as a cause.
This material is the result of work supported with resources and the use of facilities at the Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Coatesville, PA, USA. The opinions expressed are not those of the Department of Veterans Affairs or of the U.S. Government. This work is not subject to copyright protection in the United States.
Target article
Climato-economic habitats support patterns of human needs, stresses, and freedoms
Related commentaries (24)
Cold climates demand more intertemporal self-control than warm climates1
Contextual freedom: Absoluteness versus relativity of freedom
Cultural adaptation to environmental change versus stability
Cultural adaptations to the differential threats posed by hot versus cold climates
Ecological priming: Convergent evidence for the link between ecology and psychological processes
Extending climato-economic theory: When, how, and why it explains differences in nations' creativity
Frontier migration fosters ethos of independence: Deconstructing the climato-economic theory of human culture
Fundamental freedoms and the psychology of threat, bargaining, and inequality
How is freedom distributed across the earth?
Improving climato-economic theorizing at the individual level
Individual identity and freedom of choice in the context of environmental and economic conditions
Interpersonal exchange and freedom for resource acquisition
Is there a role for “climatotherapy” in the sustainable development of mental health?
Methodological suggestions for climato-economic theory
Personality traits, national character stereotypes, and climate–economic conditions
Play, animals, resources: The need for a rich (and challenging) comparative environment
Press freedom, oil exports, and risk for natural disasters: A challenge for climato-economic theory?
Shared adaptiveness is not group adaptation
Subtle variation in ambient room temperature influences the expression of social cognition
The need for psychological needs: A role for social capital
Toward an integrated, causal, and psychological model of climato-economics
Unsurprising, in a good way
What about politics and culture?
What is freedom–and does wealth cause it?
Author response
White, gray, and black domains of cultural adaptations to climato-economic conditions