Roni, this is a very interesting conversation. Both of you touched upon some very important topics. From my own personal experience, it is very difficult to break the walls of strong empathy. It mainly depends on how strong the emotions are within a person. To me, the greatest revelation was understanding the biology of emotions and the fact that emotions are, in fact, biological in their nature (and not so much psychological). I think that the nature of empathy is for humans to be able to leave freely and harmlessly in harmony with others. The problem is not with empathy but with the lack of it within some individuals, which causes a disruption in, what should be, a peaceful and friendly world to live in. Your channel is really good and useful and I wish you get more subscribers so more people can see it. Thank you.
This made my day, thank you 🙏🏻♥️ That’s an interesting observation - it may very well be that true danger of too much empathy is the exposure to individuals lacking in empathy. Thanks for taking the time to listen and engage with the ideas 💫 P.S. More episodes on emotions and their biological roots on the way!
@TheBiggerPicturePodcast Please keep it up. It might take some time to build your channel, but please be persistent. You have interesting guests and even better topics. You are reaching people, as far as I can see. Btw, after watching this interview, I'm beginning to see empathy as another sense, in addition to the other five senses. I don't think it's dangerous, but it could be a gift if one knows how to use it. Conversations like this interview really help inerrancy it better... at least to me 😊🖖🏼
Thank you for such awesome content. Im finding it hard to listen to the lady with the headphones. Would there be any chance of subtitles being made avaulable
1:03:25 I have wondered for many years if there was a sort of Mathematical Dyslexia TOTALLY independent of the verbal/reading variety. I can remember to THIS DAY, at 62+ having MASSIVE difficulty learning certain of the multiplication tables that I still have to question and BACK UP with a calculator if it is something that REALLY MATTERS. LIKE life/death or close enough. Ratio and proportions and fractions same thing. School went I went through was trying to teach Metric/decimal AND FRACTIONS all at the same time. Think still do. Multiplication tables made me HATE MATH, SCHOOL and eventually FEMALE TEACHERS that eventually were ALL OF them. Maybe not hate but be HIGHLY SKEPTICAL of their motivations. Starting in second grade practically all "New" teachers I had were "First Generation Wokies" and by High School PRACTICALLY ALL of them looking back. And all of them "took (whatever) out on the males in whichever class it was. One even told all males there wasn't ANY WAY they will get an "A" in her class. One exception that year was highly runired to be closeted Gay.
1:08:21 Mention it to his BOSS (or maybe his spouse would be wiser) at the annual Christmas Party it that hasn't been Eliminated for Budget or a "Convenient" DIE excuse. (REFUSE to use DEI because that order isn't true for ANYTHING)
1:04:13 Hiw do you even tell which are in given state of most any job's "culture" these days when practically ALL in the US now follow the management strategy of get rid of all humans BUT ME! Preferably before next quarters market numbers are posted and to hell with ANYTHING resembling "the Future". Especially ANY EMPLOYEES beliefs in one for themselves!
I only comment because it's clear you can do better than this. Referring to university culture as "Marxist" is repeating a (mindless, anti-intellectual) talking point which shows a clear lack of understanding of both Marxism and universities. Marxism is an abstract economic theory which applies a Hegelian analysis to class conflict, positing that the negative aspects of capitalism will inevitably trigger a cultural revolution resulting in a classless communist society.That's a gross oversimplification, and like all abstractions, it is an idealization of reality while still containing a lot of truth. Read Marx yourself, don't let other people tell you what Marxism is; they typically have no idea. Meanwhile, most universities, particularly so-called research universities, are inherently non-Marxist. Universities adhere to fairly strict class hierarchies bordering on the medieval. Graduate students and instructional faculty are virtual serfs, doing most of the actual work while earning tiny amounts of money compared to faculty, while high level administrators enjoy huge salaries and enormous power with little or no accountability to anyone. That's the opposite of what Marxism posits, based even on the brief description provided above. Yes, universities tend to be liberal, but that's because, in general, educated people tend to be more liberal. That doesn't make them Marxist, which is a concept largely orthogonal to liberal ideas about culture and society.
❤❤❤❤
Roni, this is a very interesting conversation. Both of you touched upon some very important topics. From my own personal experience, it is very difficult to break the walls of strong empathy. It mainly depends on how strong the emotions are within a person.
To me, the greatest revelation was understanding the biology of emotions and the fact that emotions are, in fact, biological in their nature (and not so much psychological). I think that the nature of empathy is for humans to be able to leave freely and harmlessly in harmony with others. The problem is not with empathy but with the lack of it within some individuals, which causes a disruption in, what should be, a peaceful and friendly world to live in.
Your channel is really good and useful and I wish you get more subscribers so more people can see it.
Thank you.
This made my day, thank you 🙏🏻♥️
That’s an interesting observation - it may very well be that true danger of too much empathy is the exposure to individuals lacking in empathy.
Thanks for taking the time to listen and engage with the ideas 💫
P.S. More episodes on emotions and their biological roots on the way!
@TheBiggerPicturePodcast
Please keep it up. It might take some time to build your channel, but please be persistent.
You have interesting guests and even better topics. You are reaching people, as far as I can see.
Btw, after watching this interview, I'm beginning to see empathy as another sense, in addition to the other five senses. I don't think it's dangerous, but it could be a gift if one knows how to use it. Conversations like this interview really help inerrancy it better... at least to me 😊🖖🏼
wow so impressed with this conversation- thank you- have just subbed x
Thank you for such awesome content. Im finding it hard to listen to the lady with the headphones. Would there be any chance of subtitles being made avaulable
Are there no UA-cam generated closed captions available?
1:03:25 I have wondered for many years if there was a sort of Mathematical Dyslexia TOTALLY independent of the verbal/reading variety.
I can remember to THIS DAY, at 62+ having MASSIVE difficulty learning certain of the multiplication tables that I still have to question and BACK UP with a calculator if it is something that REALLY MATTERS. LIKE life/death or close enough.
Ratio and proportions and fractions same thing. School went I went through was trying to teach Metric/decimal AND FRACTIONS all at the same time. Think still do.
Multiplication tables made me HATE MATH, SCHOOL and eventually FEMALE TEACHERS that eventually were ALL OF them.
Maybe not hate but be HIGHLY SKEPTICAL of their motivations. Starting in second grade practically all "New" teachers I had were "First Generation Wokies" and by High School PRACTICALLY ALL of them looking back. And all of them "took (whatever) out on the males in whichever class it was.
One even told all males there wasn't ANY WAY they will get an "A" in her class. One exception that year was highly runired to be closeted Gay.
8:01 Can you give me one single culture that does not value empathy? Cultures differ in how empathy is directed and acted upon.
1:08:21 Mention it to his BOSS (or maybe his spouse would be wiser) at the annual Christmas Party it that hasn't been Eliminated for Budget or a "Convenient" DIE excuse. (REFUSE to use DEI because that order isn't true for ANYTHING)
1:04:13 Hiw do you even tell which are in given state of most any job's "culture" these days when practically ALL in the US now follow the management strategy of get rid of all humans BUT ME! Preferably before next quarters market numbers are posted and to hell with ANYTHING resembling "the Future".
Especially ANY EMPLOYEES beliefs in one for themselves!
The road to hell really is paved with good intentions?
Just look at the West nowadays!
I only comment because it's clear you can do better than this. Referring to university culture as "Marxist" is repeating a (mindless, anti-intellectual) talking point which shows a clear lack of understanding of both Marxism and universities. Marxism is an abstract economic theory which applies a Hegelian analysis to class conflict, positing that the negative aspects of capitalism will inevitably trigger a cultural revolution resulting in a classless communist society.That's a gross oversimplification, and like all abstractions, it is an idealization of reality while still containing a lot of truth. Read Marx yourself, don't let other people tell you what Marxism is; they typically have no idea. Meanwhile, most universities, particularly so-called research universities, are inherently non-Marxist. Universities adhere to fairly strict class hierarchies bordering on the medieval. Graduate students and instructional faculty are virtual serfs, doing most of the actual work while earning tiny amounts of money compared to faculty, while high level administrators enjoy huge salaries and enormous power with little or no accountability to anyone. That's the opposite of what Marxism posits, based even on the brief description provided above. Yes, universities tend to be liberal, but that's because, in general, educated people tend to be more liberal. That doesn't make them Marxist, which is a concept largely orthogonal to liberal ideas about culture and society.
If you think Ayn Rand is a good writer, I suggest you read more books.
So why don’t you go publish your own books you know maybe make that great American novel or whatever the hell they say
Not helpful ... unless you're a mean grrl &/or you're signalling to your tribe!
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