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Empathy vs. Sympathy
Which Word To Use And When
dictionary.com
How are empathy and sympathy the
same?
The terms empathy and sympathy are
often confused and with good reason.
Both of the words
deal with the relationship a person has to the feelings and experiences of
another person. So, let’s explore the differences between these terms and how
they are most commonly used.
Both sympathy and empathy have
roots in the Greek term páthos meaning “suffering, feeling.”
What is sympathy?
Sympathy is the older of the two terms. It entered English in the mid-1500s with a very broad meaning of “agreement or harmony in qualities between things or people.”
Sympathy is the older of the two terms. It entered English in the mid-1500s with a very broad meaning of “agreement or harmony in qualities between things or people.”
Since then, the term has come to be used in a more specific way.
Nowadays, sympathy is
largely used to convey commiseration, pity, or feelings of sorrow for someone
else who is experiencing misfortune.
This sense is often
seen in the category of greeting cards labeled “sympathy” that specialize in
messages of support and sorrow for others in a time of need.
You feel bad for
them … but you don’t know what it is like to be in their shoes.
Consider the
following examples:
“I’ve always liked Saturn. But I also have some
sympathy for Pluto because I heard it’s been downgraded from a planet, and I
think it should remain a planet. Once you’ve given something planetary status
it’s kind of mean to take it away.” – Jared Leto
“Pity may represent little more than the impersonal
concern which prompts the mailing of a check, but true sympathy is the personal
concern which demands the giving of one’s soul.” – Martin
Luther King Jr.
What is empathy?
Empathy entered English a few centuries after sympathy — in the late 1800s — with a somewhat technical and now obsolete meaning from the field of psychology.
Empathy entered English a few centuries after sympathy — in the late 1800s — with a somewhat technical and now obsolete meaning from the field of psychology.
Unlike sympathy, empathy has
come to be used in a more broad way than it was when it was first introduced;
the term is now most often used to refer to the capacity or ability to imagine
oneself in the situation of another, experiencing the emotions, ideas, or
opinions of that person.
Consider
the following examples:
“As you get older you have more respect and
empathy for your parents. Now I have a great relationship with both of them.” –
Hugh Jackman
“I’ve always thought of acting as more of an
exercise in empathy, which is not to be confused with sympathy. You’re trying
to get inside a certain emotional reality or motivational reality and try to
figure out what that’s about so you can represent it.” - Edward
Norton
To sum it all up …
The
differences between the most commonly used meanings of these two terms is:
· sympathy is feeling compassion,
sorrow, or pity for the hardships that another person encounters
· empathy is putting yourself in the
shoes of another, which is why actors often talk about it.
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