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Social Empathy

The Art of Understanding Others

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

Our ability to understand others and help others understand us is essential to our individual and collective well-being. Yet there are many barriers that keep us from walking in the shoes of others: fear, skepticism, and power structures that separate us from those outside our narrow groups. To progress in a multicultural world and ensure our common good, we need to overcome these obstacles. Our best hope can be found in the skill of empathy.
In Social Empathy, Elizabeth A. Segal explains how we can develop our ability to understand one another and have compassion toward different social groups. When we are socially empathic, we not only imagine what it is like to be another person, but we consider their social, economic, and political circumstances and what shaped them. Segal explains the evolutionary and learned components of interpersonal and social empathy, including neurobiological factors and the role of social structures. Ultimately, empathy is not only a part of interpersonal relations: it is fundamental to interactions between different social groups and can be a way to bridge diverse people and communities. A clear and useful explanation of an often misunderstood concept, Social Empathy brings together sociology, psychology, social work, and cognitive neuroscience to illustrate how to become better advocates for justice.

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    • Library Journal

      September 15, 2018

      Segal (social work, Arizona State Univ.; Social Welfare Policy and Social Programs, 4th ed.) summarizes her ten-plus years of research into social work, psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and sociology to present a new study of empathy, raising the fundamental helping skill of imagining oneself in another's place, to a higher level. Empathy is not sympathy or telling someone you know how they feel, writes Segal, who smartly emphasizes how to relate to another race, culture, gender, or any group defined by characteristics different from your own. As the author reminds, understanding and helping others are essential to our collective well-being, and exercising social empathy will advance us toward creating truly multicultural societies. Segal explains the fundamentals of empathy, why the skill is important yet difficult to emulate, barriers to developing the ability, such as physical stressors and other health factors, the role of religious dogma, and the impact of empathy of technology. VERDICT Essential for all university libraries supporting social work. Ought to be required reading for the pathologically narcissistic POTUS and all his lackeys.--Dale Farris, Groves, TX

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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