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Current most popular post: Five Ways to Expand Your Empathy
A feature on 30 Ideas for a Better Life in The Observer profiles my ideas on empathy and the Outrospection blog.
I was recently interviewed about empathy, happiness and the future of work by Bloom Psychology.
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Category Archives: religion
Should you empathise with your father’s killer?
One of the greatest challenges of leading an empathetic life is trying to step into the shoes of people who we consider to be ‘enemies’ or whose views and values are very different from our own. If you’re on the receiving end of a racist comment from someone at the pub or a torrent of unfair verbal abuse from your boss, the idea of trying to empathise with them would probably be the last thing on your mind. If you came face to face with the person who had recently burgled your house, could you overcome your anger to see the crime from their perspective, and understand the circumstances that may have driven them to it?
Empathising in such instances might seem like wishful thinking. But consider the case of Jo Berry. In 1984 her father, Conservative MP Sir Anthony Berry, was killed by an IRA bomb at the Party Conference in Brighton. In 1999, one of the IRA members responsible, Pat Magee, was released from prison under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement. Jo’s response was a desire to meet him.
Also posted in empathy through conversation, interviews, peace building, politics, public policy 3 Comments
You are, therefore I am
A recent report by Human Rights Watch has highlighted the persecution in Vietnam of followers of the Zen Buddhist monk and peace activist Thich Nhat Hanh. Now in his eighties and author of books that have sold over a million copies, Thich Nhat Hanh is known as one of the founders of ‘engaged Buddhism’, which [...]
Posted in religion 3 Comments
Ian McEwan on Love, Empathy and 9/11