barcacel
Vitantiheterodroidsexual Monk-mode MGTOW
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basically, east asians have less affective empathy than Northwest Europeans, but east asians have a gene that makes them more conformist and less individualistic, which make them commit less crimes, if a white guy has a child with an east asian girl, the baby will inherit the cognitive empathy but will not inherit the affective empathy of the father, he will also not inherit the conformist and less individualistic genes from the mother, this will make the child a sociopath.
there are 2 types of empathy:
cognitive empathy: the ability to imagine how another person feels without involuntarily making that feeling one's own
affective (emotional) empathy: you not only understand how others feel but also transfer those feelings to yourself, i.e., there is a greater tendency to feel the other person's pain.
now we know why Elliot Rodger did what he did
if east asians had the same empathy and the same social behavior as whites (conformity and individualism), they would be 100 times more technologically advanced because of their higher intelligence
this increased individualism, empathy and decreased conformism made whites develop more technologically advanced civilizations than east asians
@Saint Cho @AsiaCel @starcrapoo
there are 2 types of empathy:
cognitive empathy: the ability to imagine how another person feels without involuntarily making that feeling one's own
affective (emotional) empathy: you not only understand how others feel but also transfer those feelings to yourself, i.e., there is a greater tendency to feel the other person's pain.
"Northwest Europeans and East Asians are similar in having high levels of empathy but differ in the relative importance of cognitive empathy versus affective empathy. Affective empathy is much more key to prosocial behavior among Northwest Europeans than among East Asians."
https://evoandproud.blogspot.com/2020/03/affective-empathy-double-edged-sword.html
"When Siu and Shek (2005) studied empathy in a Chinese sample ranging from 18 to 29 years of age, they found that the participants made little distinction between cognitive empathy and affective (emotional) empathy. These two components seemed to be weakly differentiated from each other. The authors attributed this finding to "cultural differences" "Chinese people might not perceive the items from the two dimensions as too different in nature." The authors went on to note that "there are still debates concerning the boundaries of emotional and cognitive processes underlying empathy" and that "the causal relationships between cognitive and emotional processing underlying empathy are not simple or unidirectional."
In short, the Chinese participants could see things from another person's perspective and understand how that person felt. There is much less indication, however, that they involuntarily experienced the feelings of other people, especially feelings of distress. This is not to say they were incapable of such emotion transference, but rather that it seems limited in scope, perhaps being confined to family members and not extended to strangers."
https://evoandproud.blogspot.com/2014/09/affective-empathy-evolutionary-mistake.html
"One might think that cognitive empathy would be worse than affective empathy as a basis for prosocial behavior. For instance, sociopaths are usually high in cognitive empathy: they know how another person feels in a given situation, but they use this knowledge to exploit and control that person. Wouldn't their resulting success eventually destroy social order? East Asian societies may have avoided this outcome through their low level of individualism and their correspondingly high level of social conformity. Kitayama et al. (2014) makes this point when discussing certain alleles of a gene, DRD4, that are associated with risk seeking and heavy drinking in the United States but not in East Asia. These alleles seem to increase the desire to emulate one's peers, and such emulation is more likely to favor dysfunctional behavior in the United States than in East Asia
These alleles seem to explain the weaker individualism and stronger social conformity of East Asians."
https://evoandproud.blogspot.com/2020/03/affective-empathy-double-edged-sword.html
"- When viewing a person suffering physical pain, British subjects report greater negative affect than do East Asian subjects.
- When viewing a person suffering social pain, British subjects show greater empathic concern but lower empathic accuracy than do East Asian subjects.
- British subjects report greater empathic concern, but lower empathic accuracy than do Chinese subjects. Emotional expressivity predicts British but not Chinese empathic concern.
- Empathic concern explains differences between the two groups in donating, a measure of prosocial behavior.
- American subjects, more so than Japanese subjects, feel more affective empathy for one friend over another when the two friends are engaged in an intense disagreement."
https://evoandproud.blogspot.com/2020/03/affective-empathy-double-edged-sword.html
https://evoandproud.blogspot.com/2020/03/affective-empathy-double-edged-sword.html
"When Siu and Shek (2005) studied empathy in a Chinese sample ranging from 18 to 29 years of age, they found that the participants made little distinction between cognitive empathy and affective (emotional) empathy. These two components seemed to be weakly differentiated from each other. The authors attributed this finding to "cultural differences" "Chinese people might not perceive the items from the two dimensions as too different in nature." The authors went on to note that "there are still debates concerning the boundaries of emotional and cognitive processes underlying empathy" and that "the causal relationships between cognitive and emotional processing underlying empathy are not simple or unidirectional."
In short, the Chinese participants could see things from another person's perspective and understand how that person felt. There is much less indication, however, that they involuntarily experienced the feelings of other people, especially feelings of distress. This is not to say they were incapable of such emotion transference, but rather that it seems limited in scope, perhaps being confined to family members and not extended to strangers."
https://evoandproud.blogspot.com/2014/09/affective-empathy-evolutionary-mistake.html
"One might think that cognitive empathy would be worse than affective empathy as a basis for prosocial behavior. For instance, sociopaths are usually high in cognitive empathy: they know how another person feels in a given situation, but they use this knowledge to exploit and control that person. Wouldn't their resulting success eventually destroy social order? East Asian societies may have avoided this outcome through their low level of individualism and their correspondingly high level of social conformity. Kitayama et al. (2014) makes this point when discussing certain alleles of a gene, DRD4, that are associated with risk seeking and heavy drinking in the United States but not in East Asia. These alleles seem to increase the desire to emulate one's peers, and such emulation is more likely to favor dysfunctional behavior in the United States than in East Asia
These alleles seem to explain the weaker individualism and stronger social conformity of East Asians."
https://evoandproud.blogspot.com/2020/03/affective-empathy-double-edged-sword.html
"- When viewing a person suffering physical pain, British subjects report greater negative affect than do East Asian subjects.
- When viewing a person suffering social pain, British subjects show greater empathic concern but lower empathic accuracy than do East Asian subjects.
- British subjects report greater empathic concern, but lower empathic accuracy than do Chinese subjects. Emotional expressivity predicts British but not Chinese empathic concern.
- Empathic concern explains differences between the two groups in donating, a measure of prosocial behavior.
- American subjects, more so than Japanese subjects, feel more affective empathy for one friend over another when the two friends are engaged in an intense disagreement."
https://evoandproud.blogspot.com/2020/03/affective-empathy-double-edged-sword.html
now we know why Elliot Rodger did what he did
if east asians had the same empathy and the same social behavior as whites (conformity and individualism), they would be 100 times more technologically advanced because of their higher intelligence
this increased individualism, empathy and decreased conformism made whites develop more technologically advanced civilizations than east asians
@Saint Cho @AsiaCel @starcrapoo
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