This book digs into the complex archaeology of empathy illuminating controversies, epistemic problems and unanswered questions encapsulated within its cross-disciplinary history.
The authors ask how a neutral innate capacity to directly understand the actions and feelings of others becomes charged with emotion and moral values associated with altruism or caregiving. They explore how the discovery of the mirror neuron system and its interpretation as the neurobiological basis of empathy has stimulated such an enormous body of research and how in a number of these studies, the moral values and social attitudes underlying empathy in human perception and action are conceptualized as universal traits. It is argued that in the humanities the historical, cultural and scientific genealogies of empathy and its forerunners, such as Einfühlung, have been shown to depend on historical preconditions, cultural procedures, and symbolic systems of production.
The multiple semantics of empathy and related concepts are discussed in the context of their cultural and historical foundations, raising questions about these cross-disciplinary constellations. This volume will be of interest to scholars of psychology, art history, cultural research, history of science, literary studies, neuroscience, philosophy and psychoanalysis.
1. The Heterogeneity of Empathy - An Archaeology of Multiple Meanings
and Epistemic Implications; Sigrid Weigel.- Part I: Epistemic
Interventions.- 2. Levels of Empathy Primary, Extended, and Reiterated
Empathy; Thomas Fuchs.- 3. Embodied Empathy Clinical and Developmental
Perspectives in Psychoanalysis; Marianne Leuzinger-Bohleber.- 4. Empathy and
Other Minds A Neuropsychoanalytic Perspective and a Clinical Vignette; Mark
Solms.- 5. Measuring the Emotional Quality - Empathy and Sympathy in
Empirical Psychology; Vanessa Lux.- 6. From Absorption to Judgement: Empathy
in Aesthetic Response; David Freedberg.- 7. The Empathic Body in Experimental
Aesthetics Embodied Simulation and Art; Vittorio Gallese.- Part II. Debated
History.- 8. Empathy, Imagination, and Dramaturgy A Means of Society in
18th Century Theory; Helmut J. Schneider.- 9. Einfühlung A Key Concept of
Psychological Aesthetics; Christian G. Allesch.- 10. A Question of Character
Analogy and the EmpathicLife of Things; Andrea Pinotti.- 11. The Roots of
Intersubjectivity - Empathy and Phenomenology according to Edith
Stein; Patrizia Manganaro.- 12. Empathys Translations Three Paths of
Einfühlung into Anglo-American Psychology; Susan Lanzoni.
Vanessa Lux is a research fellow at the Faculty of Psychology at Ruhr University Bochum, Germany. From 2011 to 2015, she was a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Literary and Cultural Research Berlin in research projects on epigenetics and neuropsychoanalysis. She is a member of the International Society for Theoretical Psychology. Sigrid Weigel is a research scholar and former Director of the interdisciplinary Center for Literary and Culture Research in Berlin, an expert of Benjamin, Warburg, Heine, Freud, Arendt, Scholem et al. and has published on the cultural history of knowledge, images and European cultural history.