The Dangers of Empathy
The Dangers of Empathy
It can distract us from rational thought and meaningful compassion.
Just over 14 years ago, my daughter almost died minutes before entering the world. My wife had to have an emergency C-section. The whole thing was harrowing. Someday I’ll tell the whole story. But because of that experience, and simply because I am a father, I could empathize with late-night host Jimmy Kimmel’s story about his son’s birth. His story is almost surely more harrowing than my story, but that doesn’t matter. Empathy is the ability to feel what someone else is feeling.
Empathy is different than sympathy or compassion. Sympathy is when you feel sorry for someone. Compassion is when you do something about it.
But empathy is something else. Researchers studying the brain can actually see how the various centers controlling certain feelings light up when we observe or imagine the experiences of others. “If you feel bad for someone who is bored, that’s sympathy," writes Yale psychologist Paul Bloom in his brave and brilliant new book, Against Empathy: The Case for Rational Compassion, “but if you feel bored, that’s empathy."
Bloom, a liberal transplant from Canada, distrusts empathy because empathy is like a drug. It distorts our perspective, causing us to get all worked up about an individual or group. He compares it to a spotlight that illuminates a specific person or group, plunging everything and everyone else into darkness.
“When some people think about empathy, they think about kindness. I think about war," Bloom writes. He’s got a point. Look at the Middle East today. Sunni nations empathize with the plight of suffering Sunnis, and that empathy causes them to further hate and demonize Shiites. Many people around the world empathize with the Palestinians, blinding them to the legitimate concerns of Israelis. And vice versa.
Adolf Hitler was a master of empathy — for ethnic Germans in the Sudetenland, Austria, and elsewhere. The cause of nationalist empathy for the German tribe triggered profound moral blindness for the plight, and even the humanity, of Jews, Gypsies, and Slavs.
Again, Bloom is a squishy liberal by his own account, but he’s also a leading scholar of how the mind actually works, not how we wish it would work.
Human beings are naturally inclined to sympathize and empathize with people like them. There has never been a society where people didn’t give priority to helping family and friends over strangers. This tends to blind us “to the suffering of those we do not or cannot empathize with," writes Bloom. “Empathy is biased, pushing us in the direction of parochialism and racism."
Look at the intractable debate over the phrase “black lives matter." The slogan itself is a kind of spotlight, argue supporters, highlighting the legitimate complaints of African Americans. But it also blinds them to why others respond to the term by saying “all lives matter."
I don’t go as far as Bloom in detesting empathy. It seems to me not only natural but also defensible to give priority to figuratively kindred people. England is a lot more like America than, say, Singapore. That similarity has forged a long and important bond, both formally (e.g., treaties and shared institutions) and informally in terms of an emotional and cultural bond. If England were attacked, our empathy for its plight would inform our response in ways that I think are important and useful.
But where I agree with Bloom is that empathy alone is dangerous and can distract us from rational thought and meaningful compassion.
Which brings me back to Jimmy Kimmel. His story about his son aroused a riot of empathy across the nation. And he used that response to make an argument about health-care policy that was largely devoid of any consideration of the facts, trade-offs, or costs of what is the best way to deal with people, including babies, who have pre-existing medical conditions. He was largely wrong on the facts: Babies with dire medical conditions are covered by their parents’ insurance, and when their parents are uninsured, doctors don’t just let the baby die on the table. That doesn’t mean there aren’t inequities in the system or that the current health-care regime is anywhere close to perfect.
But it is very difficult to have a rational discussion about the trade-offs inherent to any health-care system — including socialized medicine — when all anyone can think about is the ordeal of a newborn baby and his loving parents.
— Jonah Goldberg is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and a senior editor of National Review. You can write to him by e-mail at goldbergcolumn@gmail.com or via Twitter @JonahNRO. Copyright © 2017 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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Really LOL!!!!
What that putz is saying that you have to be devoid of empathy if you want to cut 10s of millions low income Americans from subsidies that help them pay for health insurance to give tax cuts to the rich and corporations.
He's a sociopath and so are you if you believe his BS.
My wife needed an operation and we had to go to the local hospital. What we learned/observed:
1. Reusable glass bottles are used for IV's. Disposables are too expensive. Generic drugs are used as patented drugs don't meet the cost criteria.
2. Doctors took their vacations and supplemented their incomes by traveling to countries that allowed them to be paid for their expertise and performed proc...See More
Was this Italy during the Bunga bunga years? Yeah, a corrupt government might be bad at running healthcare. I have worked with a number of Canadians. They love their healthcare system, and they are horrified by ours.
America has the best healthcare in the world, if you can afford it. Many, many people cannot. That's the problem. It's like saying New York City has the best penthouses in the world.
I'm Edwin Rutsch, the director of the Center for Building a Culture of Empathy. Our center is working to make empathy a primary social value. As a leader in this effort, I have also interviewed well over 300 experts on empathy from all fields including education, science, academics, arts, therapy, conflict mediation, interfaith, human-centered design, etc. etc. These interviews are available on our website.
I read the book and all of Paul Bloom's related articles. For 3+ years, since Paul wrote his ...See More
But the reverse is true as well. Rationality and practicality must be also take into account empathy.
Conservatives are rapidly in danger of becoming the evil characature that liberals have painted them with for decades: greedy, selfish, uncaring, opposed to education and knowledge, warmongering, sociopathic. Titles like this one aren't going to help that.
So Jimmy Kimmel's baby would have been treated even if he had no insurance. I agree the system is far from perfect but doctors don't just let uninsured patients die.
A newborn baby has a hole in his heart, and under conservative healthcare proposals, his family could go deep into insurmountable debt in order to dave his life. Meanwhile, the CEO of a pharma company has a special Iron Man suit made for the sales launch of their new drug. (I don't think it was for the launch of the new Oxycontin for kids, but maybe it was. And yes, that's a real thing.)
Yes, that's a gross oversimplification of the issue, but so is saying that having empathy for Jimmy Kimmel and his sick baby will keep us from making good decisions about healthcare in this country.
You're kidding right Jonah? BLM means "BLM [TOO]", not [ONLY].
I don't pretend to know Kimmel's views on abortion, but somehow I think he would be very lacking in any empathy for its victims, as would most of his audience.
But I get the point - these anecdotes can be disproportionately persuasive and are often overused in arguments ("I know a guy who had to leave Canada to get an appendectomy", or better - every State of the Union address with it's guests...). Yes, let's all rely more on rational arguments and not anecdotes. I'm not hopeful this will happen though.
Source: www.nationalreview.com