Cognitive Science Colloquium: Paul Bloom, Against empathy

Thursday, October 6, 2016
3:30 a.m.
Bioscience Research Building 1103
Peter Carruthers
301 405 6602
pcarruth@umd.edu

Against empathy

Paul Bloom
Psychology, Yale University

AbstractMany psychologists, philosophers, and laypeople believe that empathy is necessary for moral judgment and moral action—the only problem with empathy is that we sometimes don’t have enough of it. Drawing on research into psychopathy, criminal behavior, charitable giving, infant cognition, cognitive neuroscience, and Buddhist meditation practices, I’ll argue that this is mistaken. Empathy is a poor moral guide. It is biased, short-sighted, and innumerate—we should try to do without it. We are much better off, in both public policy and intimate relationships, drawing upon a combination of reason and distanced compassion. 

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