Comments on Reddit:
Note: no examples are given of philosophers who hold the (bizarre) thesis that empathy, or any other single emotion, is on its own necessary or sufficient for morality/ethics. No-one that I know of, not even Smith or Hume, holds this thesis. But, y'know, it's Prinz, so it gets published. [Prinz would disagree; see my reply]
Prinz should know better than to artificially isolate a single type of motivation in this way... it's doubtful that such an isolation is even conceptually coherent, let alone that anyone ever acts from "empathy alone", so the whole idea of it being necessary or sufficient for morality is kind of confused to begin with.
Right. Every time I read lesswrong I'm struck by the total lack of empathy and desire to diminish it's role in the world. As far as I can tell this is part of their overall program to promote diversity in all things except values.
Personally I'm sympathetic to large parts of their philosophical program. But their insistence that everyone must follow the party line or be deemed "wrong" would make a Stalinist blush.
First comment seems useful. Second seems to be a generic attack with no actual content.
The following are extracts from the paper “Is Empathy Necessary For Morality?” (philpapers) by Jesse Prinz (WP) of CUNY; recently linked in a David Brooks New York Times column, “The Limits of Empathy”:
1 Introduction
2 Is Empathy Necessary for Moral Judgment?
3 Is Empathy Necessary for Moral Development?
4 Is Empathy Necessary for Moral Conduct?
5 Should we Cultivate An Empathy Based Morality?
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