“…Once situationist research has revealed the way in which agents are influenced by the presence or absence of certain odours, tastes, objects, people etc., those variables can be deliberately manipulated in order to nudge people towards beneficial behaviour without forcing, incentivizing or trying to rationally convince them to do so. 14 Mind shaping of this kind has already proven to be effective, for instance, in connection with healthy eating habits (Vecchio & Cavallo, 2019), where the positioning of healthy food options on menus (Keegan et al, 2019) or healthy food recipes on food platforms (Starke et al, 2021) affects people’s dietary choices. It can also encourage more sustainable consumption habits (e.g., Demarque et al, 2015; Lehner et al, 2016) by increasing people’s willingness to use reusable takeaway boxes (Dorn & Stoeckli, 2018) or cups (Loschelder et al, 2019) or reducing meat consumption (May & Kumar, 2022; Sparkman et al, 2020) and ideological biases on climate change (Goldberg et al, 2020; Sparkman et al, 2021).…”