Events

The KLI support international groups of scholars in the life and sustainability sciences working on interdisciplinary projects to conduct their groundbreaking research at the institute.  KLI Focus Groups and Working Groups aim to develop ideas on a particular subject and generate suggestions for action. The participants have different scientific backgrounds and strive to develop specific, practical goals.  Focus Groups are one-time meetings gathering and working together at the KLI for a period of one to maximum two weeks. Working Groups comprise 3 meetings over the course of one year and a half.

Event Details

Riana Betzler
KLI Colloquia
Finding Empathy: How neuroscientific measures, evidence, and conceptualizations interact
Riana BETZLER (KLI)
2018-09-25 15:00 - 2018-09-25 16:30
KLI
Organized by KLI

Topic description / abstract:

Questions about how empathy should be conceptualized have long been a preoccupation of the field of empathy research.  There are numerous definitions of empathy that have been proposed and that often overlap with other concepts such as sympathy and compassion.  This makes communication between research groups or across disciplines difficult.  Many researchers seem to see the diversity of definitions as a problem rather than as a form of benign pluralism.  Within this debate about conceptualization, researchers often express the idea that neuroscientific evidence will make this problem go away—that it will uncover underlying empathy processes and thereby also sort out conceptual difficulties.  In this paper, I challenge this assumption by examining how neuroscientists studying empathy use concepts in practice—both in the development of their measures and in the interpretation of their data. 

 

Biographical note:

Riana Betzler is currently a postdoctoral research fellow at the KLI.  Her work focuses on issues in the philosophy of psychology—in particular, as relates to social cognition and the emotions.  She completed her PhD and MPhil in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge.  Prior to that, she attained her undergraduate degree in psychology at Yale.