Motivating Empathy: The Problem of Bodily Similarity in Husserl’s Theory of Empathy

Husserl Studies 33 (1):45-61 (2017)
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Abstract

Husserl’s theory of empathy plays a crucial role in his transcendental phenomenology and has ever since been critically examined. Among various critiques leveled at Husserl, the issue of bodily similarity between oneself and the other lies at the core, not only because Husserl conceives of it as the motivating factor of empathy but also because his account of it has been taken to be problematic. In this article, I review a main interpretation of the issue of bodily similarity in Husserl, which takes the bodily similarity in question to be a visual resemblance between oneself and the other. By contrast, I give a new interpretation of bodily similarity by taking into account Husserl’s emphasis on tactual experience with regard to the constitution of one’s own lived body and the foreign body. I argue that the bodily similarity in question amounts to a similar manner of twofold bodily manifestation in oneself and the other, and I also suggest that this interpretation further enables a new understanding of interpersonal relation in Husserl.

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Zhida Luo
University of Copenhagen

References found in this work

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Merleau-Ponty's ontology.Martin C. Dillon - 1997 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.

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