Media narratives as the solution to limited human empathy: narrative empathy, imaginative perspective-taking, Einfühlung, and the 'what it's like' theory of consciousness

In this paper, I propose that stories are the best way to overcome empathy-related epistemic challenges - experiencing stories is the closest we can come to putting ourselves in the shoes of others because of the tropes and devices used by writers, the fact that stories portray consciousness in ways...

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Main Author: Nurul Hannah Bte Azman
Other Authors: Grace Boey
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165401
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author Nurul Hannah Bte Azman
author2 Grace Boey
author_facet Grace Boey
Nurul Hannah Bte Azman
author_sort Nurul Hannah Bte Azman
collection NTU
description In this paper, I propose that stories are the best way to overcome empathy-related epistemic challenges - experiencing stories is the closest we can come to putting ourselves in the shoes of others because of the tropes and devices used by writers, the fact that stories portray consciousness in ways we can best understand, and the fact that stories must contain characters whose lives we follow. I define empathy and narrative empathy, exploring its limitations with reference to Thomas Nagel and Olivia Bailey. I posit that the ability of stories to represent the inner worlds of people, depict consciousness in a way that allows for uniquely human understanding, and encourage attitudes of imaginative perspective-taking, allows us to largely overcome the limits of human empathy. I respond to the objection that there are other means of imaginative perspective-taking that are more effective than stories (i.e experiential simulators) by emphasising that these methods would still cause us to face the same problems described by Nagel and Bailey, and that stories, understood as art, inherently involve the process of empathy - the German Aesthetic concept of Einfühlung.
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spelling ntu-10356/1654012023-04-01T16:56:03Z Media narratives as the solution to limited human empathy: narrative empathy, imaginative perspective-taking, Einfühlung, and the 'what it's like' theory of consciousness Nurul Hannah Bte Azman Grace Boey School of Humanities gboey@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Philosophy In this paper, I propose that stories are the best way to overcome empathy-related epistemic challenges - experiencing stories is the closest we can come to putting ourselves in the shoes of others because of the tropes and devices used by writers, the fact that stories portray consciousness in ways we can best understand, and the fact that stories must contain characters whose lives we follow. I define empathy and narrative empathy, exploring its limitations with reference to Thomas Nagel and Olivia Bailey. I posit that the ability of stories to represent the inner worlds of people, depict consciousness in a way that allows for uniquely human understanding, and encourage attitudes of imaginative perspective-taking, allows us to largely overcome the limits of human empathy. I respond to the objection that there are other means of imaginative perspective-taking that are more effective than stories (i.e experiential simulators) by emphasising that these methods would still cause us to face the same problems described by Nagel and Bailey, and that stories, understood as art, inherently involve the process of empathy - the German Aesthetic concept of Einfühlung. Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy 2023-03-27T04:35:12Z 2023-03-27T04:35:12Z 2023 Final Year Project (FYP) Nurul Hannah Bte Azman (2023). Media narratives as the solution to limited human empathy: narrative empathy, imaginative perspective-taking, Einfühlung, and the 'what it's like' theory of consciousness. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165401 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165401 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
spellingShingle Humanities::Philosophy
Nurul Hannah Bte Azman
Media narratives as the solution to limited human empathy: narrative empathy, imaginative perspective-taking, Einfühlung, and the 'what it's like' theory of consciousness
title Media narratives as the solution to limited human empathy: narrative empathy, imaginative perspective-taking, Einfühlung, and the 'what it's like' theory of consciousness
title_full Media narratives as the solution to limited human empathy: narrative empathy, imaginative perspective-taking, Einfühlung, and the 'what it's like' theory of consciousness
title_fullStr Media narratives as the solution to limited human empathy: narrative empathy, imaginative perspective-taking, Einfühlung, and the 'what it's like' theory of consciousness
title_full_unstemmed Media narratives as the solution to limited human empathy: narrative empathy, imaginative perspective-taking, Einfühlung, and the 'what it's like' theory of consciousness
title_short Media narratives as the solution to limited human empathy: narrative empathy, imaginative perspective-taking, Einfühlung, and the 'what it's like' theory of consciousness
title_sort media narratives as the solution to limited human empathy narrative empathy imaginative perspective taking einfuhlung and the what it s like theory of consciousness
topic Humanities::Philosophy
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/165401
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