Abstract
The failure to understand the needs, beliefs, and values of others is widely blamed on
a lack of empathy, which has been touted in recent years as the necessary ingredient
for bringing us together and ultimately for tackling issues of social justice and
harmony. In this essay, I explore whether empathy really can serve the role it has
been tasked with. To answer this question, I will first identify what empathy is
and why its champions believe it plays such an essential role in social life. With
this in mind, I contend that promoting empathy on its own may make solidarity
among diverse populations more difficult to achieve and undermine social reconciliation.
Instead, I argue for a different approach that begins with acknowledging our
self-oriented perspective and how it shapes what we see, appreciate, and interpret,
before turning to others with a kind of loving attention. Unlike empathy, loving attention
allows us to see others as they really are, not as we imagine we would be in
their shoes, and is that kind of perception that is necessary for bridging divides
and building solidarity in our contemporary world.