 jancanc
jancanc         
          Mww
Mww         
         Schopenhauer explains compassion metaphysically; through the concept of his will, all humans are manifestations of one identical will which lies beyond experience — jancanc
Notice that an ‘us’, a community, is a natural entity a plurality of individuals. No appeal to metaphysics, to a non-spatio-temporal unity, is required to explain its existence." — jancanc
 Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
         Schopenhauer explains compassion metaphysically; through the concept of his will, all humans are manifestations of one identical will which lies beyond experience, we feel compassion since when we see another suffering we, as being form the same will, experience this suffering. — jancanc
 schopenhauer1
schopenhauer1         
          8livesleft
8livesleft         
          jancanc
jancanc         
          jancanc
jancanc         
         The discomfort of others causes the self to sense discomfort as well and so there is the desire to alleviate that. — 8livesleft
 jancanc
jancanc         
         Compassion is so lauded by Schop precisely because it is something which gets one out of the individuation cycle. — schopenhauer1
 jancanc
jancanc         
         "what really moves the altruist is that she loves us, and is therefore moved to care equally for all members of the ‘us’, for self and others. On this representation of the altruist, no egoism of any sort is involved since the fundamental object of love is a nonego. Notice that an ‘us’, a community, is a natural entity a plurality of individuals. No appeal to metaphysics, to a non-spatio-temporal unity, is required to explain its existence."
How to classify this account? it seems empirical in the sense that it requires no appeal to metaphysics, but also seems to be a loosely phenomenological type of explanation since the person, via first person recognition, one recognizes that they belong to a community. However, strictly speaking, it can't be both an empirical and phenomenological account? — jancanc
 8livesleft
8livesleft         
         but would you agree that the two "discomforts" are nevertheless empirically distinct?? You have your discomfort and I have mine, which is caused by yours? — jancanc
 jancanc
jancanc         
         Yes definitely distinct. The observer can only surmise what's happening based on their own personal experience. But there will still be that shared relatedness of observing another's experience that causes one to recall something that something similar also occurred to them.
With regards to yawning, you don't even have to be sleepy but when the person you're with (who is sleepy) yawns, it somehow causes you to yawn as well.
Or seeing your friends laughing at something you didn't yourself see but you still find yourself "copying" their reaction. — 8livesleft
 Possibility
Possibility         
          8livesleft
8livesleft         
         Great answer, friend. But, when it comes to fellow feelings, would you personally term this phenomenon as empathy or compassion? — jancanc
 Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
          jancanc
jancanc         
         modern ethical theorists will generally try and ground any such accounts in the reality of social life alone, so as to avoid anything that hints of metaphysics. But I don't see how such accounts can be anything other than reductionist. — Wayfarer
 Pfhorrest
Pfhorrest         
          jancanc
jancanc         
         True, empiricism is usually paired with a universalism about reality that thus requires agreement between different first-person experiences, i.e. intersubjectivity, but nothing ever said that phenomenalism has to be entirely solipsistic, caring about only one person’s experiences and no others. — Pfhorrest
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