Empathy Doesn’t Extend Across the Political Aisle
When we try to put ourselves in someone else’s shoes, we usually go
all the way, assuming that they feel the same way we do. But a new study
published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science,
finds that we have limits: we don’t extend this projection to people
who have different political views, even under extreme circumstances.
The researchers chose to examine political differences because of the
big divide perceived between people on opposing sides, as shown by
earlier research. We can look beyond someone having a different gender
or being from a different country, but if you’re a Democrat and someone
else is a Republican, that person seems extremely different. “Political
values are emotionally charged. People get really fired up,” says Ed
O’Brien of the University of Michigan, who cowrote the study with Phoebe
C. Ellsworth.
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
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