- #71
moving finger
- 1,689
- 1
I would argue that there are degrees of empathy. One person can show "more empathy" than another. Or do you believe that empathy is an "all or nothing affair"? Do you believe that it is simply black and white, either one has complete empathy, or one has none at all?quantumcarl said:"High empathy"? Please explain. Is there such thing as a "low empathy"?
In the same way, there are degrees of understanding. For example, agent "A" could claim to understand something about quantum physics, but "A" might nevertheless acknolwedge that "A" does not understand as much as agent "B", who is a quantum physics expert.
It would be wrong to conclude that both A and B had the same degree of understanding of quantum physics. It would also be wrong to conclude that A had no understanding and B had understanding.
You believe that empathy comes in binary? Either one has complete empathy, or one has none at all? Nothing in between?quantumcarl said:As far as I know, empathy is empathy. It is an ability to understand the curcumstances influencing another human being as well as the ability to identify with objects and animals other than humans. It is a part of understanding and a powerful by-product of consciousness.
You seem to think that complete empathy is necessary for any kind of understanding.quantumcarl said:You don't need to empathize with a Frankophone to understand the french language?
Of course you do. Otherwise you wouldn't be learning french. As soon as the vowels and all those damn silent letters start forming in your mouth... and you have to twist an accent out of your tongue... you are on the path to empathizing with the French people... like it or not. You are assuming their role and method of communication. When you assume the role or... "walk in their shoes" (so to speak) you are truly standing under them... or... understanding the people and their language.
You are entitled to your rather strange opinion, but I do not share it.
It can be argued that person X who understands the French language AND empathises strongly with the French people has a better understanding of the French language than person Y who also understands the French language but does not empathise strongly with the French people, but it would be wrong to conclude from this that Y does not understand the French language at all.
Perhaps you need to invent a new English word to encapsulate what you believe to be the case. As far as I am concerned, there are "degrees of understanding", it is not a "black and white" affair. Just as there are degrees of comprehension.quantumcarl said:Understanding describes a function in humans that is more complex than the simple ability to repeat words in a correct sequence so that communication in french or math or medicine is achieved. That is called comprehension and it is properly used by the Italians when they ask you if you "comprende?" as in "can you comprehend what I am saying?"
If "understanding of Z" was a black and white affair, then it should be possible to test a person's "understanding of Z" and always achieve either 0% or perfect 100% score (either they do understand Z, or they do not). The world does not work this way (even if you would want your ideal world to work like this, it doesn't).
Single words allow for subtle shades (which you seem to deny). If I say "it is snowing outside", that could mean anything from "there are a few snowflakes drifting about" to "there is a whiteout out there, you cannot see anything because of the blizzard".quantumcarl said:There is a reason there are different words to describe different functions... the differences between the meanings of words are slight... but they are there for a reason. Terminologies offer subtle shades that help to distinguish the speaker's or writer's references and descriptions.
An Eskimo might have different words for these two different types of snow, but in English "it is snowing outside" would be correct in both cases. "it is snowing outside" allows different shades in meaning. In the same way "X understands Y" allows for different shades in meaning - it might mean that X has a basic understanding of Y, it might mean that X is an expert in Y.
I will pass on this, I cannot see the relevance.quantumcarl said:That is why you see cell differenciation in the plant and animal kingdoms. Different cells function in different ways. They don't work in other organs or tissues. They must be used in the context they have evolved to serve. Much in the way languages develope specific terminology to describe specific functions.
And I would still claim that BOTH the alien and the human understand, they just do it in different ways.quantumcarl said:The alien term for understanding is different from the North American term "understanding". The alien terms describes a completely different function... they may use telepathy... they may have greater experiences they may hook up with parallel dimensions to ascertain the function of "ravlinz". For humans, and I'm not sure yet what the components of understanding are... but for humans we use experience, consciousness, empathy and knowledge in a slap-dash mixture that we call "understanding".
may your God go with you
MF