Write4U
Valued Senior Member
Experience is the ultimate natural teacher.You keep erecting the straw man "teach experience".
Experience is the ultimate natural teacher.You keep erecting the straw man "teach experience".
You need to learn the difference in meaning between the words "abstract knowledge" and "experiential knowledge"If you only think abstraction is a dispassionate mental exercise then we are at an impasse. No need to continue, as you're not likely to ever understand
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/abstractDefinition of abstract
1a : disassociated from any specific instance : an abstract entity
b : difficult to understand : abstruse, abstract problems
c : insufficiently factual : formal, possessed only an abstract right
2: expressing a quality apart from an object : the word poem is concrete,poetry is abstract
3a : dealing with a subject in its abstract aspects : theoretical, abstract science
b : detached, impersonal : the abstract compassion of a surgeon
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/experienceDefinition of experience
: direct observation of or participation in events as a basis of knowledge: the fact or state of having been affected by or gained knowledge through direct observation or participation
: practical knowledge, skill, or practice derived from direct observation of or participation in events or in a particular activity
b : the length of such participation
: something personally encountered, undergone, or lived through
: the conscious events that make up an individual life: the events that make up the conscious past of a community or nation or humankind generally
: the act or process of directly perceiving events or reality
"Only somatic empathy, a third class, is a response to direct stimuli." Yes, direct stimulus of the MNSVociferous said
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirroring_(psychology)Mirroring is the subconscious replication of another person's nonverbal signals.[1] This concept takes place in everyday interactions, and often goes unnoticed by both the person enacting the mirroring behaviors as well as the individual who is being mirrored. The activation of mirror neurons takes place within the individual who begins to mirror another's movements, and allows them a greater connection and understanding with the individual who they are mirroring, as well as allowing the individual who is being mirrored to feel a stronger connection with the other individual.
Mirroring is distinct from conscious imitation under the premise that while the latter is a conscious, typically overt effort to copy another person, mirroring is subconsciously done during the act and often goes unnoticed.
Yes, all are types of "empathy"We might be able to make some inferences from a person's inability to understand different types of empathy.
"Only somatic empathy, a third class, is a response to direct stimuli." Yes, direct stimulus of the MNS
"Affective empathy is a response to another's emotional or arousal state." Yes, direct stimulus of the MNS
"Cognitive empathy is the mental modeling of another's state." Yes, direct stimulus of the MNS
OTOH, sympathy is the response to indirect stimulus of the MNS
As I said before (which you apparently missed), the mirror neural system of the brain (MNS) is the seat of any and all mental cognitive and/or internal physical experiences, direct or indirect.
It is the subconscious cognitive processing of many types of external and internal information or stimuli.
Mirroring is the subconscious replication of another person's nonverbal signals.[1] This concept takes place in everyday interactions, and often goes unnoticed by both the person enacting the mirroring behaviors as well as the individual who is being mirrored. The activation of mirror neurons takes place within the individual who begins to mirror another's movements, and allows them a greater connection and understanding with the individual who they are mirroring, as well as allowing the individual who is being mirrored to feel a stronger connection with the other individual.
Mirroring is distinct from conscious imitation under the premise that while the latter is a conscious, typically overt effort to copy another person, mirroring is subconsciously done during the act and often goes unnoticed.
This is why the term contains the word "mirror" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mirroring_(psychology)
If all are types of empathy, you seem to be saying that cognitive empathy is a "subconscious replication of another person's nonverbal signals".Yes, all are types of "empathy"We might be able to make some inferences from a person's inability to understand different types of empathy.
Obviously that implied ad hominem does not apply to me, I do understand the different types of empathy. No matter how you sort them, they are all expressions of "empathy".
What happened to "sympathy" ?
You've answered your own question. We don't admire people's subconscious empathic responses. They can be of all sorts, good and/or bad, based on their learned mirrored experience. Sharks enter into a state of "feeding frenzie". Their MNS exists only of "food means eating", there is no empathy nor sympathy.You keep claiming all empathy is an autonomic mirror neuron response, but if so, why would we think better of people who were more empathetic? According to you, it's not in their ability to control.
I didn't say that did apply to you, but you do seem to be trying to agree while contradicting your own argument.
"Sympathy is feeling compassion, sorrow, or pity for the hardships that another person encounters." If you were putting yourself in the shoes of someone by pitying them, they would have to be expressing pity.
Sharing is one of the hallmarks of human behavior: give me a cookie and I’m more likely to give you one later. But our bonobo cousins have an odd variation on the practice. They share with strangers before friends.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/podcast/episode/bonobos-share-with-strangers-first-13-01-03/Why choose an outsider over a friend?
In another experiment, the scientists found bonobos only shared when doing so led to a social interaction. Giving up some food to strangers lets these apes expand their social network. This behavior may have evolved to promote social tolerance, in contrast with chimps' sometimes deadly aggression against strangers. Which means that even when food is offered, there's still no such thing as a free lunch.
You've answered your own question. We don't admire people's subconscious empathic responses. ...
OTOH, a hungry person will eat what's available and if they are closely related to another hungry person, they may share, that's empathy.
But we admire sympathetic people, i.e. people who deal out food to the poor , while they themselves are not hungry. That's expressing pity or sympathy. Like doctors who will voluntarily travel to assist in time of a natural disaster.
Nothing to be admired in empathy, it's a common trait of all people who have a normally developed brain.We don't admire the empathetic?
I gave you the middle ground, you just failed to recognize it. But I can sympathize with your mental frustration......Between that, and your persistence for using idiosyncratic definitions, I'm done here. There's no middle ground to be found.
Cheers.
That was a nice sympathetic response. If you were a Bonobo it would in fact be an empathic response..Have a banana. It helps.