Empathy is operationalised and measured in various different ways in research. I have identified several trends in empathy research that have resulted in what I refer to as neurotypical gatekeeping of the concept of empathy. Narrow assumptions on the relationship between experiences and expressions have made the concept exclusive to those who are perceived as neurotypical. In several ways, this has biased our knowledge of empathy, especially regarding autism. This does not only invalidate autistic empathy, but also sustains a harmful and stigmatizing narrative of autism. In this paper, I expand on the neurotypical gatekeeping of empathy as a matter of epistemic injustice and argue why and how neurodiversity calls for a reconceptualization o...
I will discuss the relationship between empathy and moral reasoning among people with autism. I will...
Joel Smith’s definition of empathy is likely to be objected to as discriminating against high functi...
This work was supported by a grant from The Character Project (Psychology of Character), from Wake F...
This chapter provides a critique of medical and literary writing about autism that maintains it is c...
Empathy is an often researched but highly ambiguous concept. This makes research on empathy prone to...
This paper gives an analysis of some conceptual issues in the neuroscientific study of empathy. The ...
This paper gives an analysis of some conceptual issues in the neuroscientific study of empathy. The ...
There has been a widely held belief that people with autism spectrum disorders lack empathy. This ar...
In recent years, there has been a great deal of controversy in the philosophy of mind, developmental...
In recent years, there has been a great deal of controversy in the philosophy of mind, developmental...
This dissertation explores the nature of empathy and its role in moral thinking and in medical pract...
As early as 1962, psychologists described children with “autistic psychopathy” as being “unable to a...
I will discuss the relationship between empathy and moral reasoning among people with autism. I will...
Today’s debate on empathy is characterized by an interplay between neuroscience, philosophy of mind ...
Joel Smith’s definition of empathy is likely to be objected to as discriminating against high functi...
I will discuss the relationship between empathy and moral reasoning among people with autism. I will...
Joel Smith’s definition of empathy is likely to be objected to as discriminating against high functi...
This work was supported by a grant from The Character Project (Psychology of Character), from Wake F...
This chapter provides a critique of medical and literary writing about autism that maintains it is c...
Empathy is an often researched but highly ambiguous concept. This makes research on empathy prone to...
This paper gives an analysis of some conceptual issues in the neuroscientific study of empathy. The ...
This paper gives an analysis of some conceptual issues in the neuroscientific study of empathy. The ...
There has been a widely held belief that people with autism spectrum disorders lack empathy. This ar...
In recent years, there has been a great deal of controversy in the philosophy of mind, developmental...
In recent years, there has been a great deal of controversy in the philosophy of mind, developmental...
This dissertation explores the nature of empathy and its role in moral thinking and in medical pract...
As early as 1962, psychologists described children with “autistic psychopathy” as being “unable to a...
I will discuss the relationship between empathy and moral reasoning among people with autism. I will...
Today’s debate on empathy is characterized by an interplay between neuroscience, philosophy of mind ...
Joel Smith’s definition of empathy is likely to be objected to as discriminating against high functi...
I will discuss the relationship between empathy and moral reasoning among people with autism. I will...
Joel Smith’s definition of empathy is likely to be objected to as discriminating against high functi...
This work was supported by a grant from The Character Project (Psychology of Character), from Wake F...