Skip to main content

Home/ Psychology: The Science Of Human Nature/ Group items tagged Empathy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

thinkahol *

Paul Zak: Trust, morality -- and oxytocin | Video on TED.com - 0 views

  •  
    What drives our desire to behave morally? Neuroeconomist Paul Zak shows why he believes oxytocin (he calls it "the moral molecule") is responsible for trust, empathy and other feelings that help build a stable society.
Caramel Crow

In Deed, Indeed - Compassion and Empathy | Brain Blogger - 0 views

  •  
    Like this http://cheaptravelbooker.com Like this http://cheaptravelbooker.com like this http://killdo.de.gg travel,hotel,fun,hotel new,new offer,hotel best,best hotel,hotel travel,seo,backlinks,edu,gov,ads,indexing,bookmark,killgoggle,gogglesuck,goggle bookmark,kill goggle,yahoo,bing,indexing,quality links,linkwell,traffic boster,index best
thinkahol *

Sam Richards: A radical experiment in empathy | Video on TED.com - 0 views

  •  
    By leading the Americans in his audience at TEDxPSU step by step through the thought process, sociologist Sam Richards sets an extraordinary challenge: can they understand -- not approve of, but understand -- the motivations of an Iraqi insurgent? And by extension, can anyone truly understand and empathize with another?
thinkahol *

How to size up the people in your life - opinion - 15 August 2011 - New Scientist - 0 views

  •  
    Why are we all so different? Here is a toolkit for finding out what people are really like IN THE 4th century BC, the Greek philosopher Theophrastus, Aristotle's student and successor, wrote a book about personality. The project was motivated by his interest in what he considered a very puzzling question: "Why it has come about that, albeit the whole of Greece lies in the same clime, and all Greeks have a like upbringing, we have not the same constitution of character?" Not knowing how to get at the answer, Theophrastus decided to instead focus on categorising those seemingly mysterious differences in personality. The result was a book of descriptions of personality types to which he assigned names such as The Suspicious, The Fearful and The Proud. The book made such an impression that it was passed down through the ages, and is still available online today as The Characters of Theophrastus. The two big questions about personality that so interested Theophrastus are the same ones we ask ourselves about the people we know: why do we have different personalities? And what is the best way to describe them? In the past few decades, researchers have been gradually answering these questions, and in my new book, Making Sense of People: Decoding the mysteries of personality, I take a look at some of these answers. When it comes to the origins of personality, we have learned a lot. We now know that personality traits are greatly influenced by the interactions between the set of gene variants that we happen to have been born with and the social environment we happen to grow up in. The gene variants that a person inherits favour certain behavioural tendencies, such as assertiveness or cautiousness, while their environmental circumstances influence the forms these innate behavioural tendencies take. The ongoing dialogue between the person's genome and environment gradually establishes the enduring ways of thinking and feeling that are the building blocks of personality. This de
thinkahol *

The Empathy Ceiling: The Rich Are Different - And Not In a Good Way, Studies Suggest | ... - 0 views

  •  
    Psychologist and social scientist Dacher Keltner says the rich really are different, and not in a good way: Their life experience makes them less empathetic, less altruistic, and generally more selfish.
Erich Feldmeier

Brad M. Farrant wissenschaft.de - Prägende Gespräche, Empathie ! - 0 views

  •  
    "Die Forscher betonen die enorme Bedeutung dieser empathischen Fähigkeiten: Menschen fällt es damit einfacher bei einem Konflikt die Argumente des Gegenübers zu verstehen und den Streit zu beheben. Dem kommt in unserer heutigen Gesellschaft eine Schlüsselrolle zu, meint Studienleiter Brad Farrant von der University of Western Australien: „Um die Probleme der globalisierten Welt zu lösen, müssen wir alle besser darin werden, uns in die Perspektive anderer Menschen zu versetzen.""
Caramel Crow

Brain plasticity and criminal behavior; part 1 | On the Brain by Dr. Mike Merzenich,Ph.D. - 0 views

  •  
    6-part series on brain plasticity and criminal behavior
1 - 10 of 10
Showing 20 items per page