Sympathy=Experiencing another's feeling but not being motivated to alleviating action. Sympathy is usually the sharing of unhappiness or suffering, but it can also refer to sharing other (positive) emotions as well.
Empathy=Is understanding others feelings and caring about the way they are feeling, Putting your self in anothers shoes.
2006-08-31 12:09:01
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answer #1
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answered by Ashley 3
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Sympathy Is Bringing Emotion into the equation.
Sympathy Is Understanding A Living Things Problem And Consoling And/Or Showing An emotion to match What's going on for the living thing & shows the living thing that they understand.
Empathy Is: the Actual Understanding The Point of view of the thing (Doesn't Have To Be Living - Can Be A Collective Idea Such As A religion Or Organisation. (But Lets Keep It Simple)
-Being Able To Put Yourself In Their Shoes Therefore knowing How One Feels Or How One Came To A Decision Or understanding ones thought process Thus being able to continue that pattern, (There Are Varying Degrees Of This) & Emotion Doesn't Have To Be Part Of It.
HOPE THIS HELPS
2006-08-31 12:06:50
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answer #2
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answered by skettopolis 4
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Sympathy means that you feel sorry for someone
Empathy means that you understand how a person is feeling
2006-08-31 12:14:14
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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One dictionary says that empathy is the “identification with and understanding of another’s situation, feelings, and motives.” It has also been described as the ability to put oneself in the other fellow’s place. So empathy requires first of all that we comprehend the circumstances of someone else and second that we share the feelings that those circumstances provoke in him. Yes, empathy involves our feeling another person’s pain in our heart. Sympathy is an expression of kind consideration or pity that brings relief to those who are disadvantaged; tender compassion; the outward manifestation of pity; it assumes need on the part of him who receives it, and resources adequate to meet the need on the part of him who shows it.’” It generally conveys the idea of feeling “sympathy with the misery of another, and especially sympathy manifested in act.”
2016-04-03 21:47:30
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Empathy is understanding others feelings in an intellectual way while sympathy is being able to understand others' feelings in an emotional context.
2006-08-31 12:08:57
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answer #5
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answered by apostate03 3
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Sympathy - A feeling of support for someone who is sad, hurt, lonely etc.
Empathy - the ability to understand someoneelse's feelinds and problems.
2006-08-31 12:08:08
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Sympathy is the careing for other people emotions and empathy is knowing what the other persons emotions are.
2006-08-31 12:08:12
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answer #7
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answered by Gisbit 1
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Sympathy is when you pity someone and feel sorry for them. On the other hand, Empathy is concerned with understanding the person, how they feel, as if being in their shoes.
2006-08-31 12:11:09
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answer #8
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answered by Jessica 1
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WILL Durant said all great nations begin stoic and end epicurean. America has been on this well-traveled road to Rome for some time, but we can also measure our decline by another yardstick that is uniquely ours. We began as sympathizers and will end as empathizers.
The Nineties have blurred the original distinction between sympathy and empathy and the dictionaries have followed suit, but just for old times' sake, here it is: We sympathize with people whose troubles are different from ours; we empathize with people in the same boat. "I feel your pain" is empathy, but "I can imagine your pain" is sympathy.
That sympathy is obviously the nobler emotion explains why it has fallen out of favor with Americans. In the first place, it's too hard, demanding not only thoughtful reflection but a certain amount of serious reading. Second, it smacks of elitism. Lastly, sympathy compels us to touch the third rail of egalitarian democracy: the generalization. Once we utter the words "I can imagine" we enter the realm of broad, sweeping thought, which tends to produce broad, sweeping statements, which, as we all know, tend to hit the multi- cultural fan with a horrendous splat.
How much safer, then, to trade the wide-ranging heroics of sympathy for empathy's nonjudgmental inclusiveness and reassuring common touch. We made the switch the way we always do, by constant repetition of the word, until everybody was empathizing with everybody else and reciting "I identify with" and "I can relate to" over every conceivable foible and calamity that flesh and spirit are heir to, all in the name of a level suffering field.
2006-08-31 12:08:00
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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to suffer together also: affected by like feelings or emotion. Thus the essence of SYMPATHY is that a person's feelings reflect or are like those of another or that a person suffers as a response to, or because of, another person's suffering.
Sympathy exists when the feelings or emotions of one person give rise to similar feelings in another person, creating a state of shared feeling. In common usage, sympathy is usually the sharing of unhappiness or suffering, but it can also refer to sharing other (positive) emotions as well.
EMPATHY is one's ability to recognize and understand the emotion of another. As the states of mind, beliefs, and desires of others are intertwined with their emotions, one with empathy for another may often be able to more effectively divine another's modes of thought and mood. Empathy is often characterized as the ability to "put oneself into another's shoes", or experiencing the outlook or emotions of another being within oneself, a sort of emotional resonance.
2006-08-31 12:12:01
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answer #10
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answered by kickinupfunf 6
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