On November 15 I spoke about empathy and the Outrospection blog on BBC Radio Scotland’s ‘Sally on Sunday’ programme hosted by Sally Magnusson.
Subscribe
Sign up here to receive weekly email notification of new postings.
Follow me
Podcast
Subscribe to the podcast here.
-
RSS Links
Outrospection News
Outrospection featured on the blog of #1 New York Times Bestselling author Keith Ferrazzi
Ideas for Modern Living: I have recently written a short piece on empathy for this column in The Observer Magazine.
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.
Download a free copy of my essay Empathy and the Art of Living.
I spoke about empathy and the Outrospection blog on BBC Radio Scotland's Sally on Sunday programme. Click here to listen to the interview.
Links
Topics
- art (2)
- background (2)
- climate change (2)
- design (2)
- empathy through collaboration (3)
- empathy through conversation (6)
- empathy through education (4)
- empathy through experience (4)
- film (4)
- general (3)
- history (5)
- interviews (7)
- literature (4)
- measuring empathy (2)
- nature (2)
- obituaries (1)
- peace building (3)
- philosophy (1)
- podcasts (2)
- politics (11)
- public policy (7)
- religion (4)
- reviews (3)
- science (3)
- sport (1)
- travel (3)
- uncategorized (1)
Archives
- August 2010 (2)
- July 2010 (2)
- June 2010 (2)
- May 2010 (2)
- April 2010 (2)
- March 2010 (2)
- February 2010 (2)
- January 2010 (3)
- December 2009 (3)
- November 2009 (6)
- October 2009 (1)

In an exclusive interview for OUTROSPECTION, I speak to the renowned Dutch primatologist Frans de Waal about his new book,
Review: The Sacred Made Real at the National Gallery
For over half a millennia Christian art has attempted to use empathy to help people understand the reality and significance of Christ’s suffering on the cross. We are offered paintings and sculptures showing nails piercing flesh, gaping wounds and seeping blood that aim to have us not only see what Christ endured, but also to physically feel his bodily pain. As the art historian Jill Bennett points out in her book Empathic Vision: Affect, Trauma and Contemporary Art:
‘The images developed from the late medieval period with the express function of inspiring devotion were not simply the “Bible of the unlettered” in the sense of translating words into images. Rather, they conveyed the essence of Christ’s sacrifice, the meaning of suffering, by promoting and facilitating an empathetic imitation of Christ.’
Read More »