don't think I'm being unreasonable by suggesting that such a complicated topic shouldn't be tackled by the imagination of an individual who knows nothing about it and hasn't experienced it. That should be the bare minimum, that you at least know a little bit about it and you have some experience with people who experience ugliness. — Judaka
(empathy is) It's about understanding feelings and situations and decisions and actions and the like. — Terrapin Station
I don't see the things you've listed as evidence of empathy being successful at developing understanding. — Judaka
I've given multiple comprehensive arguments against empathy as a tool for understanding with many examples already. If you still don't get it then that's a pity but I won't keep giving proper responses to careless questions and assertions. — Judaka
Empathy could provide small bits of useful information, large bits of useful information or a comprehensive idea. — Judaka
We could even talk about anecdotal examples... Really I haven't heard anything remotely interesting as a counter-argument, I have given an absolute argument and usually I hate absolute arguments. I'm sure there's some exception to my rule and I'm hoping people can add nuance to my understanding even if they can't completely reverse it. — Judaka
It's very important that psychologists use the available evidence and not their imagination. My argument is that this kind of thinking should extend to all things. — Judaka
I think that's a false dichotomy. You can (and should ) use evidence, studies, knowledge, etc. to help guide you in your attempts at empathy/imagination. — NKBJ
For example, a good empath knows someone is feeling x, y, or z even before anything has been said. You often can't pinpoint at first how you know someone is feeling something, but you pick up on all the little bodily cues: eye movements, posture, hand placement, clothing, facial expressions, etc etc. — NKBJ
Empathy promises unrealistic results - even the idea of using it face-to-face implies intuitively understanding things you have no means to understand - you can only imagine. — Judaka
Mirror neurons. If you witness them in pain and it makes you 'sad' for them, or want to help eliminate their suffering, then you'd be empathizing. If you witness them in pain and give it no further thought, or even laugh and/or make jokes about it, you're not. — creativesoul
It's about knowing how other people are feeling, knowing what they're going through, whether it be heartache, anxiety, suffering, death of a loved one, etc. — creativesoul
I don't know what you disagree with. — Judaka
I don't think it's fair to say empathy is responsible for being intellectually aware of the existence and nature of something like "heartache" or whatever else. — Judaka
It's about knowing how other people are feeling, knowing what they're going through, whether it be heartache, anxiety, suffering, death of a loved one, etc. — creativesoul
What sort of understanding do you expect empathy to help provide one with? — creativesoul
Sorry, what do you think is misinformed? You said that empathy allows us to see "pain" in others and see that pain in ourselves, we feel their pain. — Judaka
I think, like may people in the world, you have difficulty stepping into the shoes of someone else and seeing the world from their perspective. — Joshs
The advantage of powerful philosophical and psychological worldviews is that they are able to
transcend what appears to you to be hopelessly different manifestations in different contexts.
The problem isn't in the world , its in your inability to construct a more effective, flexible and comprehensive scheme of interpersonal undestanding . — Joshs
...you have difficulty stepping into the shoes of someone else and seeing the world from their perspective.
— Joshs
Nobody can do this, not me, not you, nobody. It's your imagination at play. — Judaka
Worldviews do not transcend anything... — Judaka
This is the quintessential problem of empathising with "groups" or "categories of people", you have to ignore the millions of differences that exist within the group. That's good enough for you, not for me. — Judaka
You have a long way to go. There are all sorts of things problematic with your worldview here. Far too much to take to task in one year, let alone one session here. — creativesoul
Empathy is the ability to recognize another's suffering/distress/discontent. That begins the road to better understanding others. Putting yourself in another's shoes requires more than just simple empathy. — creativesoul
Oh, but they do. They consist of words. Words are meaningful. Meaning transcends the language user... most certainly. — creativesoul
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