Empathy - way of intuitive knowledge.


 Empathy is a social skill that allows us to understand the feelings and emotions of other people. It is different from similar concepts, such as compassion, and involves the expression of our sense of solidarity with others and the ability to put ourselves in their place.

    Empathy allows us to build healthy relationships with other people, to help in emergency cases and to do good to those around us. A large part of effective communication consists in our ability to use empathy in relationships with others and understanding the feelings that other people have.

    If we can perceive the emotional state and way of thinking of others, we can be able to react appropriately to their needs. In this way, we can improve our communication skills and convey appropriate messages in effective ways.

Characteristics of empathy

  • You listen actively, you can notice the non-verbal micro-signals of the body
  • You are sensitive and understand the other's perspective
  • You reward and praise people, give them feedback for improvement
  • You are a mentor and coach for the development of others
  • You see people not as equals but as diverse – you develop opportunities according to people's different skills and qualities
  • You understand group emotion and create valuable relationships

    Empathy helps people learn more about their body language and see those flashes of receptivity in people's eyes.

    Showing empathy can turn you into a person concerned with the well-being and happiness of others.

1. “Empathy is the starting point for creating community and action. It is the impetus for creating change.” – Max Carver

2. "No one cares how much you know until they know how much you care." – Theodore Roosevelt

3. “Empathy is a respectful understanding of what others are experiencing.” –Marshall B. Rosenberg

References

  • Darwall, Stephen. “Empathy, sympathy, care”. Philosophical Studies 89 (2019): 261-282.
  • Husserl, Edmund. “Empathy and direct social perception: a phenomenological proposal”. Review ofPhilosophy and Psychology 2 (2011): 541-558.
  • Stein, Edith.On the Problem of Empathy. Trans. W. Stein. Washington: ICS Publishers, 2017.
  • Zahavi, Dan. “Simulation, projection, and empathy”. Consciousness and Cognition  17 (2008): 514-522.


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