Abstrakt: |
Empathy refers to a whole class or "cluster" of behaviors based in emotional linkage between individuals. The capacity for empathy is not unique to humans, but has evolved in a range of mammals that live in complex social groups. There is good evidence for empathy in primates, pachyderms, cetaceans, social carnivores, and rodents. Because empathy is grounded in the same neurological architecture as other pro-social behaviors such as trust, reciprocity, cooperation, and fairness, it seems likely that a whole suite of interlinked moral behaviors have co-evolved in social mammals. This essay explores the concept of empathy, reviews the scientific evidence for empathy in several species of social mammals, and suggests why empathy is adaptive. The paper concludes with a discussion of what, if anything, the discovery of empathy in other animals suggests for how we treat them and how we think about our own morality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |