Empathy is proprioceptive: the bodily fundament of empathy – a philosophical contribution to medical education

Abstract Background The current philosophical debate on empathy entails accounts of theory of mind and simulation as well as a phenomenological opposition. The first focuses on a detached observation of others from a 3rd person perspective and formulates the common claim that there is no direct acce...

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Main Authors: Florian Schmidsberger, Henriette Löffler-Stastka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-04-01
Series:BMC Medical Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1161-y
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spelling doaj-2df7d9c125a7481f90975943dde20e252020-11-25T03:57:43ZengBMCBMC Medical Education1472-69202018-04-011811610.1186/s12909-018-1161-yEmpathy is proprioceptive: the bodily fundament of empathy – a philosophical contribution to medical educationFlorian Schmidsberger0Henriette Löffler-Stastka1Institute for Philosophy, and University Program for Psychotherapeutic Propedeutics, Postgraduate Center, University of ViennaDepartment for Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, University Program for Psychotherapy Research, Teaching Center, Medical University of Vienna, Postgraduate Center, University ViennaAbstract Background The current philosophical debate on empathy entails accounts of theory of mind and simulation as well as a phenomenological opposition. The first focuses on a detached observation of others from a 3rd person perspective and formulates the common claim that there is no direct access to the mental and emotional life of others, only simulation or analogy can grant access to the emotions and behaviour of others. The philosophical respectively phenomenological account of Fuchs instead opposes by focusing personal interaction within a 1st or 2nd person perspective claiming that the emotions of others are experienceable through bodily expression and bodily resonance. Fuchs offers an account of embodied affectivity that emphasizes the role of the (subjective) body for emotion and empathy. By experiencing the bodily expressed emotions of a vis-à-vis with and through the own body empathy and social understanding are bodily grounded. Following this core thesis Fuchs differentiates a primary, bodily empathy and an extended empathy that focuses on putting myself in the shoes of others (perspective taking). Discussion By comparison of different forms of social understanding as discussed in the phenomenological tradition – like contagion, sharing and empathy – it can be shown that extended empathy has an egocentric character. By putting myself in the shoes of others I miss a person’s otherness that transcends my capacity of imagination respectively the personal frame of my experience. Further Fuchs’ disregards that a bodily based empathy is co-structured by higher level form of understanding like contextual biographic knowledge. Conclusion The philosophical discussion offers fertile impulses for Medical Education (ME) and the training of empathic communication skills. The account of Fuchs highlights the role of bodily perception (proprioception) as a resource of understanding others. Thus proprioceptive skills of a physician can support the empathic understanding of the physician. The objection against the egocentric trait of perspective taking admonishes not to generalize the own perspective as decisive for empathy and to adopt an attitude that remains open to the otherness of a patient and its experiences.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1161-yEmpathyMedical educationTrainingPhenomenology of emotionsPhilosophySimulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Florian Schmidsberger
Henriette Löffler-Stastka
spellingShingle Florian Schmidsberger
Henriette Löffler-Stastka
Empathy is proprioceptive: the bodily fundament of empathy – a philosophical contribution to medical education
BMC Medical Education
Empathy
Medical education
Training
Phenomenology of emotions
Philosophy
Simulation
author_facet Florian Schmidsberger
Henriette Löffler-Stastka
author_sort Florian Schmidsberger
title Empathy is proprioceptive: the bodily fundament of empathy – a philosophical contribution to medical education
title_short Empathy is proprioceptive: the bodily fundament of empathy – a philosophical contribution to medical education
title_full Empathy is proprioceptive: the bodily fundament of empathy – a philosophical contribution to medical education
title_fullStr Empathy is proprioceptive: the bodily fundament of empathy – a philosophical contribution to medical education
title_full_unstemmed Empathy is proprioceptive: the bodily fundament of empathy – a philosophical contribution to medical education
title_sort empathy is proprioceptive: the bodily fundament of empathy – a philosophical contribution to medical education
publisher BMC
series BMC Medical Education
issn 1472-6920
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Abstract Background The current philosophical debate on empathy entails accounts of theory of mind and simulation as well as a phenomenological opposition. The first focuses on a detached observation of others from a 3rd person perspective and formulates the common claim that there is no direct access to the mental and emotional life of others, only simulation or analogy can grant access to the emotions and behaviour of others. The philosophical respectively phenomenological account of Fuchs instead opposes by focusing personal interaction within a 1st or 2nd person perspective claiming that the emotions of others are experienceable through bodily expression and bodily resonance. Fuchs offers an account of embodied affectivity that emphasizes the role of the (subjective) body for emotion and empathy. By experiencing the bodily expressed emotions of a vis-à-vis with and through the own body empathy and social understanding are bodily grounded. Following this core thesis Fuchs differentiates a primary, bodily empathy and an extended empathy that focuses on putting myself in the shoes of others (perspective taking). Discussion By comparison of different forms of social understanding as discussed in the phenomenological tradition – like contagion, sharing and empathy – it can be shown that extended empathy has an egocentric character. By putting myself in the shoes of others I miss a person’s otherness that transcends my capacity of imagination respectively the personal frame of my experience. Further Fuchs’ disregards that a bodily based empathy is co-structured by higher level form of understanding like contextual biographic knowledge. Conclusion The philosophical discussion offers fertile impulses for Medical Education (ME) and the training of empathic communication skills. The account of Fuchs highlights the role of bodily perception (proprioception) as a resource of understanding others. Thus proprioceptive skills of a physician can support the empathic understanding of the physician. The objection against the egocentric trait of perspective taking admonishes not to generalize the own perspective as decisive for empathy and to adopt an attitude that remains open to the otherness of a patient and its experiences.
topic Empathy
Medical education
Training
Phenomenology of emotions
Philosophy
Simulation
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12909-018-1161-y
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