Daryl Cameron is an assistant professor of psychological and brain sciences at the University of Iowa. Michael Inzlicht is a professor of psychology, and William A. Cunningham is an associate professor of psychology, both at the University of Toronto
One death is a tragedy. One million is a statistic.
You’ve
probably heard this saying before. It is thought to capture an
unfortunate truth about empathy: While a single crying child or injured
puppy tugs at our heartstrings, large numbers of suffering people, as in
epidemics, earthquakes and genocides, do not inspire a comparable
reaction.
Studies have repeatedly confirmed this. It’s a troubling finding because, as recent research has demonstrated, many of us believe that if more lives are at stake, we will — and should — feel more empathy (i.e., vicariously share others’ experiences) and do more to help.
Studies have repeatedly confirmed this. It’s a troubling finding because, as recent research has demonstrated, many of us believe that if more lives are at stake, we will — and should — feel more empathy (i.e., vicariously share others’ experiences) and do more to help.
Not only does empathy seem to fail when it is needed most, but it also appears to play favorites.
Recent studies have shown that our empathy is dampened or constrained when it comes to people of different races, nationalities or creeds. These results suggest that empathy is a limited resource, like a fossil fuel, which we cannot extend indefinitely or to everyone.
Recent studies have shown that our empathy is dampened or constrained when it comes to people of different races, nationalities or creeds. These results suggest that empathy is a limited resource, like a fossil fuel, which we cannot extend indefinitely or to everyone.
What,
then, is the relationship between empathy and morality? Traditionally,
empathy has been seen as a force for moral good, motivating virtuous
deeds. Yet a growing chorus of critics, inspired by findings like those
above, depict empathy as a source of moral failure. In the words of the
psychologist Paul Bloom, empathy is a “parochial, narrow-minded” emotion
— one that “will have to yield to reason if humanity is to survive.”
We disagree.
While
we concede that the exercise of empathy is, in practice, often far too
limited in scope, we dispute the idea that this shortcoming is inherent,
a permanent flaw in the emotion itself. Inspired by a competing body of
recent research, we believe that empathy is a choice that we
make whether to extend ourselves to others. The “limits” to our empathy
are merely apparent, and can change, sometimes drastically, depending on
what we want to feel.
Two decades ago, the psychologist Daniel Batson and colleagues conducted a study
that showed that if people expected their empathy to cost them
significant money or time, they would avoid situations that they
believed would trigger it. More recently, one of us, Daryl Cameron,
along with the psychologist Keith Payne, conducted an experiment
to see if similar motivational factors could explain why we seem more
empathetic to single victims than to large numbers of them.
Participants
in this study read about either one or eight child refugees from the
Darfur region of Sudan. Half of the participants were led to expect that
they would be asked to make a donation to the refugee or refugees,
whereas the other half were not. When there was no financial cost
involved in feeling empathy, people felt more empathy for the eight
children than for the one child, reversing the usual bias. If
insensitivity to mass suffering stemmed from an intrinsic limit to
empathy, such financial factors shouldn’t have made a difference.
Likewise, in another recent study,
the psychologists Karina Schumann, Jamil Zaki and Carol S. Dweck found
that when people learned that empathy was a skill that could be improved
— as opposed to a fixed personality trait — they engaged in more effort
to experience empathy for racial groups other than their own. Empathy
for people unlike us can be expanded, it seems, just by modifying our
views about empathy.
Some kinds of people seem generally less likely to feel empathy for others — for instance, powerful people. An experiment
conducted by one of us, Michael Inzlicht, along with the researchers
Jeremy Hogeveen and Sukhvinder Obhi, found that even people temporarily
assigned to high-power roles showed brain activity consistent with lower
empathy.
But
such experimental manipulations surely cannot change a person’s
underlying empathic capacity; something else must be to blame. And other research
suggests that the blame lies with a simple change in motivation: People
with a higher sense of power exhibit less empathy because they have
less incentive to interact with others.
Even
those suffering from so-called empathy deficit disorders like
psychopathy and narcissism appear to be capable of empathy when they
want to feel it. Research
conducted by one of us, William A. Cunningham, along with the
psychologist Nathan Arbuckle, found that when dividing money between
themselves and others, people with psychopathic tendencies were more
charitable when they believed that the others were part of their
in-group. Psychopaths and narcissists are able to feel empathy; it’s
just that they don’t typically want to.
Arguments
against empathy rely on an outdated view of emotion as a capricious
beast that needs to yield to sober reason. Yes, there are many
situations in which empathy appears to be limited in its scope, but this
is not a deficiency in the emotion itself. In our view, empathy is only
as limited as we choose it to be.
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