Are Liberals and Conservatives Equally Motivated to Feel Empathy Toward
Others? Yossi Hasson et al. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, https://doi.org/10.1177/0146167218769867
Abstract: Do liberals
and conservatives differ in their empathy toward others? This question
has been difficult to resolve due to methodological constraints and
common use of ideologically biased targets. To more adequately address
this question, we examined how much empathy liberals and conservatives
want to feel, how much empathy they actually feel, and how willing they
are to help others. We used targets that are equivalent in the degree to
which liberals and conservatives identify with, by setting either
liberals, conservatives, or ideologically neutral members as social
targets. To support the generalizability of our findings, we conducted
the study in the United States, Israel, and Germany. We found that, on
average and across samples, liberals wanted to feel more empathy and
experienced more empathy than conservatives did. Liberals were also more
willing to help others than conservatives were, in the United States
and Germany, but not in Israel. In addition, across samples, both
liberals and conservatives wanted to feel less empathy toward outgroup
members than toward ingroup members or members of a nonpolitical group.
Keywords: political ideology, empathy, motivation, emotion regulation
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