Recently the Globe and Mail published
a story about a study that purported to show that college students in the USA
were 40 percent less emphatic than those of a few decades ago. Whether this is
indeed correct cannot really be determined by the methodology used in the study
quoted but that does not seem to stop enthusiastic speculation about what has
“caused” this so called drop in empathy. As expected, the usual boogy-men have
been trotted out. None of these have been demonstrated to be causal in this
change but that does not seem to stop pontification, particularly if it leads
to sales of programs or newspapers.
So what are the suggested causes? Of
course, the digital media – facebook and myspace. The argument here is that
they are “physically distant online environments” [that allow] people to
“lionize their own lives” and “functionally create a buffer between
individuals, which makes it easier to ignore others’ pain, or even at times,
inflict pain upon others.” This hyperbole makes good theatre but is not very
good social science.
Of
course the usual cause for every generational “issue” is then also brought to
the table. It’s the fault of the parents: “These kids were born around 1980. It
could be a change in parenting style. … Kids are getting the implicit message
from parents that success is what really matters. It’s hard to spend your life
pursuing success and at the same time pursue empathy, because empathy takes
work.” So here we are treated to more unproven hyperbole. It sounds plausible
so therefore it must be true (that at least is the reasoning). And guess what –
there is a program that can be purchased to fix this supposed deficit.
So what is the back story? First, is there
really a significant change in empathy (even in the face of the research
limitations of this study)? Well the first question is: what does a drop in 40
percent mean? Is this a relative drop or an absolute drop? A drop from 0.1
percent to 0.06 percent of the population is a 40 percent drop – but likely
means very little. A drop from 100 percent of the population to 60 percent of
the population is also a 40 percent drop but likely means a lot! Beware any
news story that uses percentages! Stop confusing co-relations with causality.
Sure facebook and myspace are new social realities. So are globalization and
climate change. Parenting styles are blamed for every social ill. Darn parents,
if only they could learn to do things right!
Well there are some very interesting things
on the horizon in terms of understanding empathy and how it develops and how it
may change over time. Research into children with the rare genetic condition
called Williams syndrome (one of the features is extreme sociability) is
peeling away the complexity of interactions associated with racial
stereotyping.
Other research has identified mirror neurons
in the human brain that are associated with abstract thinking, planning and
ability to empathize. This type of research, linking our understanding of how
brains develop in response to their environments will help us sort out these
important issues. The rest provides lots of impetus for speculation and
opportunities to spend our money on programs that work about 40 percent of the
time.
--Stan
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