Description

Book Synopsis
This book represents a unique indispensable reflection on the interconnection between ethics and empathy. To what extent is it right to be empathetic? Can empathy be unethical? Or is there an ethical obligation to be empathetic? Do we educate our citizens and train our professionals to use the right form of empathy?

Phenomenological ethics is a relatively new approach to ethics whose emphasis is put on the description of the lived-experience and the ethical phenomenon. The book is organized into three thematic sections: A) the main protagonists on the topic, B) the application of the results in psychology and health care, and C) further exploration of the topic in the arts. Each section will put an emphasis on one of the specific aspects of the interconnection between ethics and empathy.

The authors offer a phenomenological description of the thorny problem pertaining to the interconnection of empathy and ethics essential for professionals and scholars of different fields, such as philosophy, psychiatry, health science, psychology, and sociology.


Table of Contents

Chapter 1, Why Empathy Means Nothing—and Everything—for Ethics, John J. Drummond

Chapter 2, Ethics, empathy, and vulnerability. Trust as a way of making sense of our vulnerability and dependability, Esteban Marín-Ávila

Chapter 3, Emotion, Reality, and Ownership, Craig Derksen

Chapter 4, Embracing Ambiguity: Simone de Beauvoir’s Responsive Ethics, Maren Wehrle

Chapter 5, The Personalistic Attitude: Edmund Husserl and Edith Stein on Empathy as the Intuition of the Person as Value, Dermot Moran

Chapter 6, The role of empathy in the affective twist of Husserl’s critique of an axiological and practical reason, Carlos Lobo

Chapter 7Phenomenology as Reverence: The Role of Reverence in the Phenomenological Method of Dietrich von Hildebrand, Alexander Montes

Chapter 8, “Against” empathy: from the isolated self to intersubjectivity in Martin Heidegger’s thinking, and the consequences for health care, Francesca Brencio

Chapter 9, Being (n)one of us: The ethical and the body, Henning Nörenberg

Chapter 10, Tomasello, Husserl, and the Cognitive Foundations of Morality, Andrea Staiti and Stefano Vincini

Chapter 11, Fiat cura, et pereat mundus: Husserl’s Phenomenology of Care and Commitment, Nicolas de Warren

Chapter 12, On the problem of the idealization of empathy and ethics, Magnus Englander and Susi Ferrarello

Chapter 13, Sharing and other illusions – Asymmetry in ‘moments of meeting’, Joona Taipale

Chapter 14, Thinking With the Heart: From the Responsiveness of the Flesh to the Ethics of Responsibility, Elodie Boublil

Chapter 15, What is moral about empathy? Some considerations about the link between empathy and moral judgment, Manuel Camassa

Chapter 16, Embodiment, Empathy, and the Call to Compassion: Engendering Care and Respect for ‘the Other’ in a More-Than-Human World, Scott D. Churchill

Chapter 17, Fictional Empathy, Imagination, and Knowledge of Value, Íngrid Vendrell Ferran

Chapter 18, Affective depth and value. On Theodor Lipps’s theory of aesthetic empathy, Jannik M. Hansen and Tone Roald

Chapter 19, Music and Empathic Spaces in Therapy and Improvisation, Jannik Mosekjær Hansen, Simon Høffding and Joel Krueger

Chapter 20, To step into the life of others. Professional action, empathy and an ethics of engagement, Eva Schwarz

Chapter 21, An Empathy-Based Phenomenological Ethic for Gaming, Michael Agostinelli

Chapter 22, Empathy, alterity, morality, Dan Zahavi

Empathy and Ethics

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    £90.00

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    RRP £100.00 – you save £10.00 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Magnus Englander, Susi Ferrarello

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      View other formats and editions of Empathy and Ethics by Magnus Englander

      Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
      Publication Date: 05/05/2023
      ISBN13: 9781538154106, 978-1538154106
      ISBN10: 1538154102

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book represents a unique indispensable reflection on the interconnection between ethics and empathy. To what extent is it right to be empathetic? Can empathy be unethical? Or is there an ethical obligation to be empathetic? Do we educate our citizens and train our professionals to use the right form of empathy?

      Phenomenological ethics is a relatively new approach to ethics whose emphasis is put on the description of the lived-experience and the ethical phenomenon. The book is organized into three thematic sections: A) the main protagonists on the topic, B) the application of the results in psychology and health care, and C) further exploration of the topic in the arts. Each section will put an emphasis on one of the specific aspects of the interconnection between ethics and empathy.

      The authors offer a phenomenological description of the thorny problem pertaining to the interconnection of empathy and ethics essential for professionals and scholars of different fields, such as philosophy, psychiatry, health science, psychology, and sociology.


      Table of Contents

      Chapter 1, Why Empathy Means Nothing—and Everything—for Ethics, John J. Drummond

      Chapter 2, Ethics, empathy, and vulnerability. Trust as a way of making sense of our vulnerability and dependability, Esteban Marín-Ávila

      Chapter 3, Emotion, Reality, and Ownership, Craig Derksen

      Chapter 4, Embracing Ambiguity: Simone de Beauvoir’s Responsive Ethics, Maren Wehrle

      Chapter 5, The Personalistic Attitude: Edmund Husserl and Edith Stein on Empathy as the Intuition of the Person as Value, Dermot Moran

      Chapter 6, The role of empathy in the affective twist of Husserl’s critique of an axiological and practical reason, Carlos Lobo

      Chapter 7Phenomenology as Reverence: The Role of Reverence in the Phenomenological Method of Dietrich von Hildebrand, Alexander Montes

      Chapter 8, “Against” empathy: from the isolated self to intersubjectivity in Martin Heidegger’s thinking, and the consequences for health care, Francesca Brencio

      Chapter 9, Being (n)one of us: The ethical and the body, Henning Nörenberg

      Chapter 10, Tomasello, Husserl, and the Cognitive Foundations of Morality, Andrea Staiti and Stefano Vincini

      Chapter 11, Fiat cura, et pereat mundus: Husserl’s Phenomenology of Care and Commitment, Nicolas de Warren

      Chapter 12, On the problem of the idealization of empathy and ethics, Magnus Englander and Susi Ferrarello

      Chapter 13, Sharing and other illusions – Asymmetry in ‘moments of meeting’, Joona Taipale

      Chapter 14, Thinking With the Heart: From the Responsiveness of the Flesh to the Ethics of Responsibility, Elodie Boublil

      Chapter 15, What is moral about empathy? Some considerations about the link between empathy and moral judgment, Manuel Camassa

      Chapter 16, Embodiment, Empathy, and the Call to Compassion: Engendering Care and Respect for ‘the Other’ in a More-Than-Human World, Scott D. Churchill

      Chapter 17, Fictional Empathy, Imagination, and Knowledge of Value, Íngrid Vendrell Ferran

      Chapter 18, Affective depth and value. On Theodor Lipps’s theory of aesthetic empathy, Jannik M. Hansen and Tone Roald

      Chapter 19, Music and Empathic Spaces in Therapy and Improvisation, Jannik Mosekjær Hansen, Simon Høffding and Joel Krueger

      Chapter 20, To step into the life of others. Professional action, empathy and an ethics of engagement, Eva Schwarz

      Chapter 21, An Empathy-Based Phenomenological Ethic for Gaming, Michael Agostinelli

      Chapter 22, Empathy, alterity, morality, Dan Zahavi

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