Robert M. Sapolsky Quote

It is far from guaranteed that an empathic state leads to a compassionate act. One reason for this is captured superbly by the essayist Leslie Jamison: [Empathy] can also offer a dangerous sense of completion: that something has been done because something has been felt. It is tempting to think that feeling someone’s pain is necessarily virtuous in its own right. The peril of empathy isn’t simply that it can make us feel bad, but that it can make us feel good, which can in turn encourage us to think of empathy as an end in itself rather than part of a process, a catalyst.46 In such a situation, saying I feel your pain, becomes a New Age equivalent of the unhelpful bureaucrat saying, Look, I sympathize with your situation, but … The former is so detached from action that it doesn’t even require the but as a bridge to the there’s nothing I can/will do. Having your pain validated is swell; having it alleviated is better.

Robert M. Sapolsky

It is far from guaranteed that an empathic state leads to a compassionate act. One reason for this is captured superbly by the essayist Leslie Jamison: [Empathy] can also offer a dangerous sense of completion: that something has been done because something has been felt. It is tempting to think that feeling someone’s pain is necessarily virtuous in its own right. The peril of empathy isn’t simply that it can make us feel bad, but that it can make us feel good, which can in turn encourage us to think of empathy as an end in itself rather than part of a process, a catalyst.46 In such a situation, saying I feel your pain, becomes a New Age equivalent of the unhelpful bureaucrat saying, Look, I sympathize with your situation, but … The former is so detached from action that it doesn’t even require the but as a bridge to the there’s nothing I can/will do. Having your pain validated is swell; having it alleviated is better.

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About Robert M. Sapolsky

Robert Morris Sapolsky (born April 6, 1957) is an American academic and neuroscientist. He is the John A. and Cynthia Fry Gunn Professor at Stanford University, and is a professor of biology, neurology, and neurosurgery. His research has focused on neuroendocrinology, particularly relating to stress. He is also a research associate at the National Museums of Kenya.