However, I don't think he really means that in compassion we actually feel another's suffering inside another persons body. — jancanc
In your answer, I am assuming "harm" is a synonym for "suffering".
Physical suffering and metaphysical suffering. — jancanc
So essentially you are saying that, in compassion, I don't feel your physical suffering, yet I do feel your metaphysical suffering? — jancanc
The will is one identical will or essence, yet this is not to say that all human beings are metaphysically identical. — jancanc
Technically, I think what he means is we "share the suffering of the one identical will even though we are empirically distinct". That doesn't me I feel another's suffering 100% as they do (as their suffering).... but the will explains why my i feel any suffering at all at the sight of your suffering, and perhaps also explains why my suffering is similar to yours.... I think that's what he means. — jancanc
Yet, at the same time, the compassionate person is aware that the other is the sufferer, not himself and he is also aware that the pain is the sufferers’ pain, not his: “we feel his pain as his, and do not imagine that it is ours” . The compassionate person “shares the suffering in him (the sufferer), in spite of the fact that his skin does not enclose [his] nerves” — jancanc
That distance allows us to stand back and see and understand what is happening. — T Clark
However, I don't think he really means that in compassion we actually feel another's suffering inside another persons body. Seems there is some grammatical confusion or something? I think he is also referencing Plato's notion of participation here...participation in a transcendent source. — jancanc
“in his person, — jancanc
I concede that we cant feel pain in their body. I'm a science man myself. But, if you think of ideals and call suffering one. When you encounter another's suffering, you would recognize the ideal, then the subtle ways this suffering is specific to this person, and feel that suffering of that specific kind, surely your body creates the sensation, but you didn't create that initial one of a kind formula of suffering.
These points are interesting, can you expand? I think you i interpret him to mean that by feeling another pain in another body....we experience a pain that originates in the other?
“in his person, — jancanc
We could not feel the pain without first becoming him, one could say. — Frank Barroso
We have compassion for another because we are ultimately of the same essence. However, I don't think he really means that in compassion we actually feel another's suffering inside another persons body — jancanc
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