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  • Sympathy: A History

    Sympathy by Schliesser, Eric;

    A History

    Series: Oxford Philosophical Concepts;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 8 October 2015

    • ISBN 9780199928873
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages456 pages
    • Size 147x218x33 mm
    • Weight 712 g
    • Language English
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    Short description:

    This volume offers a historical overview of some of the most significant attempts to come to grips with sympathy in Western thought from Plato to experimental economics. The contributors are leading scholars in philosophy, classics, history, economics, comparative literature, and political science.

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    Long description:

    Our modern-day word for sympathy is derived from the classical Greek word for fellow-feeling. Both in the vernacular as well as in the various specialist literatures within philosophy, psychology, neuroscience, economics, and history, "sympathy" and "empathy" are routinely conflated. In practice, they are also used to refer to a large variety of complex, all-too-familiar social phenomena: for example, simultaneous yawning or the giggles.
    Moreover, sympathy is invoked to address problems associated with social dislocation and political conflict. It is, then, turned into a vehicle toward generating harmony among otherwise isolated individuals and a way for them to fit into a larger whole, be it society and the universe.
    This volume offers a historical overview of some of the most significant attempts to come to grips with sympathy in Western thought from Plato to experimental economics. The contributors are leading scholars in philosophy, classics, history, economics, comparative literature, and political science.
    Sympathy is originally developed in Stoic thought. It was also taken up by Plotinus and Galen. There are original contributed chapters on each of these historical moments. Use for the concept was re-discovered in the Renaissance. And the volume has original chapters not just on medical and philosophical Renaissance interest in sympathy, but also on the role of antipathy in Shakespeare and the significance of sympathy in music theory.
    Inspired by the influence of Spinoza, sympathy plays a central role in the great moral psychologies of, say, Anne Conway, Leibniz, Hume, Adam Smith, and Sophie De Grouchy during the eighteenth century. The volume should offers an introduction to key background concept that is often overlooked in many of the most important philosophies of the early modern period.
    About a century ago the idea of Einfühlung (or empathy) was developed in theoretical philosophy, then applied in practical philosophy and the newly emerging scientific disciplines of psychology. Moreover, recent economists have rediscovered sympathy in part experimentally and, in part by careful re-reading of the classics of the field.

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    Table of Contents:

    Contents
    List of Illustrations
    Contributors
    Series Editor's Foreword
    Editor's Acknowledgments
    Introduction: On Sympathy
    Eric Schliesser
    1. Stoic Sympathy
    René Brouwer
    2. Plotinus on sympatheia
    Eyjólfur Kjalar Emilsson
    Reflection: Galen's Sympathy
    Brooke Holmes
    3. Sympathy in the Renaissance
    Ann Moyer
    Reflection: Music and Sympathy
    Giuseppe Gerbino
    4. Seventeenth-Century Universal Sympathy: Stoicism,
    Platonism, Leibniz, and Conway
    Christia Mercer
    Reflection: "Take physic, pomp": King Lear Learns Sympathy
    Sarah Skwire
    5. Spinoza's Parallelism Doctrine and Metaphysical Sympathy
    Karolina Hübner
    6. The Eighteenth-Century Context of Sympathy
    from Spinoza to Kant
    Ryan Hanley
    Reflection: Theaters of Sympathy in France
    Julie Candler Hayes
    7. Hume and Smith on Sympathy, Approbation,
    and Moral Judgment
    Geoffrey Sayre-Mccord
    Reflection: Tracing a Line of Sympathy for Nature in Goethe's
    Wahlverwandtschaften
    Elizabeth Millán
    8. Sympathy in Schopenhauer and Nietzsche
    Bernard Reginster
    9. From Einfühlung to Empathy: Sympathy in Early
    Phenomenology and Psychology
    Remy Debes
    10. Sympathy Caught Between Darwin and Eugenics
    David M. Levy & Sandra
    Peart
    11. Fair and Impartial Spectators in Experimental Economic
    Behavior: Using Sympathy to Derive Action
    Vernon L. Smith & Bart J. Wilson

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