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Rescooped by
Edwin Rutsch
from Compassion
September 28, 2024 3:35 PM
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 28, 9:13 PM
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I see Christians debating about the “sin of empathy.” Is that a biblical teaching?
I think the phrasing might be deliberately provocative, verging on clickbait. But the point, I believe, is that any virtue, even empathy, can be twisted and weaponized. Although that is true, I worry that some people use that to disparage calls for genuine empathy and compassion or to justify behaviors lacking in empathy and compassion in the name of zeal for God’s truth. People have often distorted and weaponized the virtue of zealous truth telling too.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 28, 1:06 PM
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Thousands of gen Z students in Greater Manchester are to learn “soft skills” such as empathy and time-management in a UK-first trial aimed at teaching “everyday but essential” tools.
The pioneering programme will teach young people how to thrive in the workplace after employers said “digital natives” were too afraid to speak on the phone or do job interviews.
Prof Sandeep Ranote, a leading child psychiatrist, said those born between the mid-1990s and early 2010s – known as gen Z – had grown up in a very different global world that had left them lacking some key social skills.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 26, 8:46 PM
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A hallmark symptom of frontotemporal dementia, which sets it apart from other forms of dementia (such as Alzheimer's disease), is early loss of empathy. This often manifests as diminished warmth and concern for loved ones. This symptom can be profoundly unsettling for family members and loved ones close with the patient. They may feel as though the patient's personality has transformed—and that their efforts to help and support are met with indifference.
While loss of empathy has been the focus of much research from the scientific community, the precise brain mechanisms underlying the loss of empathy in frontotemporal dementia remain unclear.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 26, 8:41 PM
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by @Anita Nowak Elon Musk recently told podcaster Joe Rogan: “The fundamental weakness of Western civilization is empathy.”
Under normal circumstances, I would dismiss that as tech-bro hogwash. After all, anyone with a basic understanding of history, psychology or neuroscience knows why his position is absurd. But after studying the power of empathy for more than 15 years, I can’t ignore his words. And neither should you.
Empathy is the innate trait that unites us in our common humanity. When we step into someone else’s shoes or feel what someone else is feeling, we transcend otherness. Moreover, as Jeremy Rifkin wrote in The Empathic Civilization, “The ability to recognize oneself in the other and the other in oneself is a deeply democratizing experience.”
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 25, 6:12 PM
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The neuroscience of when empathy overwhelms—and compassion steps in. Empathy and compassion activate distinct brain networks—one linked to distress, the other to connection. Empathy can lead to emotional burnout if not transformed into compassion. Compassion involves more than feeling—it includes the motivation to help. When faced with human suffering, both empathy and compassion begin with empathic resonance—feeling with those who are suffering. Yet this shared beginning is already the peak point of similarity between these two care-related states. If empathy for suffering is not transformed into compassion, its continuation can easily spiral into empathic distress and a more individually self-oriented, dysregulated, personally detrimental, and socially disconnected state.2
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 25, 5:25 PM
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 24, 12:25 PM
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While loss of empathy has been the focus of much research from the scientific community, the precise brain mechanisms underlying the loss of empathy in frontotemporal dementia remain unclear.
Alongside colleagues from Karolinska Institute, Lund University and Umeå University in Sweden, we conducted a study which sought to understand how empathy diminishes in frontotemporal dementia. We looked at 28 patients with frontotemporal dementia and compared them against 28 healthy people.
To conduct our study, we used a type of brain scan called functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). While in the fMRI scanner, participants viewed images of hands being pricked by needles. These images were contrasted with those of hand being touched by a q-tip. This is a well-established neuroscience test that is designed to evoke feelings of concern and distress as witnessing another person in pain. We analysed the brain activity of the patients with frontotemporal dementia as they viewed the images.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 23, 5:50 PM
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New research finds that we can find AI responses more compassionate than expert human ones. We are wired to seek connection—and we will seek empathy wherever we can find it, including with AI. While AI does not share our experience, this may not matter, especially when we want to feel understood.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 23, 5:41 PM
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Empathy, defined as the ability to understand and share others' perspectives and emotions, is essential in software engineering (SE), where developers often collaborate with diverse stakeholders. It is also considered as a vital competency in many professional fields such as medicine, healthcare, nursing, animal science, education, marketing, and project management. Despite its importance, empathy remains under-researched in SE. To further explore this, we conducted a socio-technical grounded theory (STGT) study through in-depth semi-structured interviews with 22 software developers and stakeholders. Our study explored the role of empathy in SE and how SE activities and processes can be improved by considering empathy. Through applying the systematic steps of STGT data analysis and theory development, we developed a theory that explains the role of empathy in SE. Our theory details the contexts in which empathy arises, the conditions that shape it, the causes and consequences of its presence and absence. We also identified contingencies for enhancing empathy or overcoming barriers to its expression. Our findings provide practical implications for SE practitioners and researchers, offering a deeper understanding of how to effectively integrate empathy into SE processes.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 23, 5:37 PM
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An advocate for empathy-driven journalism that holds power accountable and communicates the stories of the most vulnerable, Kristof joins Mark Labberton in this episode to discuss his life’s work of reporting from the world’s most troubled regions—from Gaza to Congo, from rural Oregon to global centres of power. Known for his unsparing storytelling and deep empathy, Kristof shares the family roots and personal convictions that have shaped his lifelong pursuit of justice and hope.
They also explore how despair and progress coexist, the role of faith and empathy in healing, and how local acts of courage can ripple globally. Grounded in gritty realism, but inspired by everyday heroes, Kristof invites us to resist numbness and embrace a hope that fights to make a difference.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 23, 5:08 PM
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The researchers found that people with Alzheimer's disease scored slightly higher on a measure of empathy than peers of the same age with mild cognitive impairment, despite scoring worse on other measures of social cognition such as recognizing facial emotions and understanding the thoughts of others.
The authors of the study, published in Alzheimer's & Dementia, say this may be the first time a cognitive domain has been found to improve in dementia.
Lead author, Dr. Andrew Sommerlad (UCL Psychiatry), said, "We found compelling evidence of preserved, or potentially even increased emotional empathy in people with Alzheimer's disease, compared to people in earlier stages of cognitive decline.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 23, 4:47 PM
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Edwin Rutsch and Kevin Waldman discuss Kevin's article published in the Chicago Tribune and other newspapers entitled, "The dangerous consequences of radical empathy unchecked by reason." Kevin criticizes "radical empathy" on campuses as performative and harmful, emphasizing the need for genuine empathy that maintains critical assessment and reason. Edwin introduces his Wholistic Empathy definition model, which includes sensing into others' experiences, self-empathy, imaginative empathy and the level of overall empathy within a community. He advocates for making mutual empathy a primary social and political values.
"As a researcher, I am now compelled to ask: Can a society have too much empathy?"
In the end, they agree on the importance of mutual empathy, listening and dialogue in fostering understanding and reducing extremism. Edwin proposes using empathy circles to facilitate empathic listening and dialogue, aiming to bridge political and social divides. Kevin plans to host Empathy Circles at his University to foster constructive dialogue.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 28, 9:14 PM
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New research has provided insight into how bonobos and chimpanzees demonstrate empathy, challenging previous beliefs about their social behaviors. Scientists have long known that comforting distressed peers is a key marker of empathy; however, a direct comparison between these two ape species had never been conducted—until now.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 28, 9:11 PM
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This study examines how empathy influences the execution of the Army mission command philosophy. This timely discussion of empathy partly reveals how leaders can be better prepared to win in a future operating environment shaped by the complexity and speed of human interactions. Through the analysis of case-studies involving General Stanley McChrystal and Colonel Michael Steele, this thesis describes how each individuals empathetic mindset resulted in both favorable and unfavorable mission outcomes for their respective organizations. The results of the analysis point to the surprising and important ways that a leaders capacity for empathy impacts everything from shared understanding, team-building, and even accepting risk. This study concludes with a recommendation for an increased emphasis on empathy development within the Army and a list of suggested topics for future research.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 28, 11:46 AM
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Edwin Rutsch and Kevin Waldman discuss Kevin's article published in the Chicago Tribune and other newspapers entitled, "The dangerous consequences of radical empathy unchecked by reason." Kevin criticizes "radical empathy" on campuses as performative and harmful, emphasizing the need for genuine empathy that maintains critical assessment and reason. Edwin introduces his Wholistic Empathy definition model, which includes sensing into others' experiences, self-empathy, imaginative empathy and the level of overall empathy within a community. He advocates for making mutual empathy a primary social and political values. In the end, they agree on the importance of mutual empathy, listening and dialogue in fostering understanding and reducing extremism. Edwin proposes using empathy circles to facilitate empathic listening and dialogue, aiming to bridge political and social divides. Kevin plans to host Empathy Circles at his University to foster constructive dialogue.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 26, 8:43 PM
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By Sanjana Gajbhiye Earth.com staff writer Empathy is often seen as a defining human trait, woven into the fabric of our societies. It helps people cooperate, build friendships, and resolve conflicts. But empathy is not unique to humans. Across the animal kingdom, from elephants to the bonobos, behaviors hint at emotional connections that transcend species boundaries.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 25, 6:19 PM
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Senior author of the study, Professor Zanna Clay of Durham University’s Department of Psychology, added: “Although empathy is very important for our own species, our findings show that empathic behaviours, like consolation, appear to be a common trait we also share with our two closest ape relatives.
“Finding these overlaps between our two close cousins suggests our last common ancestor likely showed these empathic capacities too.
“A next step will be to see how much these patterns are also observed in other settings, particularly in the wild.”
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 25, 6:08 PM
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Ashoka is unleashing demand for empathy as a 21st century skill. Our Global Empathy Initiative has mobilized a powerful group of social entrepreneurs (Ashoka Fellows), schools (Ashoka Changemaker Schools), media thought leaders, and other partners to drive a fundamental shift in children’s education and coming of age.
We are looking for an extraordinary entrepreneur to lead the Empathy initiative for Southeast Asia.
We have a powerful opportunity for an imaginative, collaborative entrepreneur. If you are an accomplished leader (from any field) who has built or grown an organization from early stages to large size, has built teams, believes in the power of networks, and are looking for the next big challenge, come join us.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 24, 12:27 PM
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Known colloquially as the “prosocial hormone,” oxytocin’s role extends into human neuroscience literature, where it has been implicated in fostering empathy, facilitating cooperation, and reinforcing social trust. However, this study pioneers the demonstration of oxytocin’s capacity to simultaneously modulate both affective and motor components of prosocial behavior through distinct neuroanatomical pathways in a non-primate mammal, underscoring conserved biological principles across evolutionary scales.
Beyond its immediate scientific implications, this discovery holds profound relevance for understanding the neurobiology of empathy and social connectedness. Philosophers, behavioral scientists, and evolutionary theorists have long grappled with the origins and significance of altruism. These new insights place the roots of helping behavior squarely within genetically and neurochemically encoded frameworks, suggesting that complex social emotions need not rely solely on higher cognitive processes but can emerge from hardwired circuits facilitating mutualistic interactions.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 23, 5:51 PM
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According to Elon Musk, “The fundamental weakness of Western civilization is empathy.”
When I read this in the Guardian, I almost fell out of my chair. Sadly, it gets worse! This heresy is not merely a hallucination emanating from Elon’s ketamine-fueled brain: It is gaining traction not only among evangelical Christians, “who have begun to recast the pangs of empathy that might complicate their support for Donald Trump” but also Catholics in the JD Vance mold.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 23, 5:43 PM
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Reimagining Conflict Resolution Online Empathy-driven design isn’t limited to warm and fuzzy user experiences. It also shows up in surprising places like conflict resolution and moderation. Traditional moderation often relies on punitive measures: content flagged, accounts suspended, arguments shut down. But what if the focus shifted toward restoration and understanding?
CivilServant, a nonprofit founded at MIT Media Lab – now a part of Cornell University’s Citizens and Technology Lab, ran experiments on Reddit showing that simply changing the tone of a moderator’s intervention – using polite language instead of neutral or stern warnings, reduced hostility in comment sections. When moderators explained why rules existed instead of just enforcing them, users were more likely to comply and less likely to lash out.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 23, 5:39 PM
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Nicholas Kristof: I think that it’s that when people are put to the ultimate test, some people turn out to be cowards basically or to have really malevolent tendencies, and others just turn out to be extraordinary. I think it probably has something to do with brain chemistry and upbringing. I’m a believer that empathy is something that, like a muscle, can be nurtured. I look at history and I think there has been some real moral progress. I think that was partly a function of literature and literacy. It appears that the first mass movement in the world on behalf of people, other than oneselves, was only in the 1780s, the British Abolitionist Movement, which is so recent. And the first international relief effort was only at the time of the Irish potato famine. Now you go onto any university campus and look at a bulletin board and there all these mass movements on behalf of other people and relief efforts. So I do think there is some progress and I think probably that has a lot to do with encouraging empathy.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 23, 5:10 PM
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Criticisms of empathy are coming fast and furious. Books like Paul Bloom’s Against Empathy presaged Elon Musk’s worry that modern countries are beset, as he says, with a “civilizational, suicidal empathy.” Standards corrode. Borders become meaningless. Emotional manipulation reigns. Leadership is compromised. No one resists the woke.
Joe Rigney’s The Sin of Empathy: Compassion and Its Counterfeits (Canon Press, 2024) captures something deep and abiding in the church today. On a practical level, in identifying the “sin of empathy,” Rigney describes a relatively new phenomenon: the moral power of a particular female perspective in our lives. Rigney, like Allie Beth Stuckey, provides the name: the sin of empathy.
Rigney starts with the common sense of the matter. The pity Christians naturally feel for the downtrodden can be manipulated to excuse the victim.
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 23, 5:08 PM
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In recent months there has been a lot of talk from some Christians about a sin that is plaguing our society. It’s taking over the minds of our kids and corrupting our loved ones. What is this dastardly new trick of the Devil? Empathy. That’s right, the Devil is luring us away from God by getting us to see the world from the perspective of our neighbor. Think this sounds a little strange? Well, the Beyond Sunday Team does too. So, this week the Team makes the case for Empathy!
Don’t forget to subscribe, rate, and review the podcast and to share it with your friends, families, neighbors, and strangers!
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Scooped by
Edwin Rutsch
April 21, 1:29 AM
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Summary: Viewing stress as a potential motivator can improve productivity and wellbeing without reducing empathy or willingness to support others. Researchers developed a brief online intervention that teaches participants to reframe stress more positively using education and visualization techniques.
Despite concerns that this approach might lead to emotional detachment or less support for others, participants remained just as attuned to others’ distress and likely to help. These findings support the use of stress mindset interventions to enhance performance without compromising interpersonal relationships.
Key Facts:
Mindset Shift: Viewing stress as a challenge rather than a threat improves coping and motivation. No Empathy Loss: Participants who reframed stress were equally likely to support others in distress. Practical Tool: A 15-minute online intervention effectively shifted participants’ stress mindset.
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