Empathy and Compassion – Two Faces of Being Human
There is something I have been reflecting on for a long time—both as a professional and as a human being moving through life:
We often speak about empathy and compassion as if they are the same thing.
But they are not.
And the difference matters more than we might think.
Over the years, in my work within child welfare, I have met many people in pain—children, parents, families. I have felt with them. Sometimes deeply. Sometimes almost too deeply.
And yet, I have come to understand this:
Feeling with someone is not the same as helping them.
This is where the distinction between empathy and compassion begins to take shape.
Two hands
I have held hands like this before.
When We Feel With – The Power and Limits of Empathy
Empathy is, at its core, a kind of resonance.
You see someone cry—and something in you responds.
You hear a story—and you recognize something of your own life in it.
It is immediate. Human. Necessary.
Philosophers like Edmund Husserl and Maurice Merleau-Ponty remind us that empathy is not just a mental exercise. It is something lived through the body. A way of being open to the other as a subject, not an object.
In this sense, empathy is a doorway.
It allows us to step into another person’s world—if only for a moment.
But there is also something fragile here.
I have seen how empathy can overwhelm.
How it can blur the boundaries between “your pain” and “my pain.”
How it can leave professionals exhausted—and people feeling helpless.
Empathy alone does not always guide us.
Sometimes, it simply pulls us under.
When We Act – The Quiet Strength of Compassion
Compassion is something different.
It begins where empathy often stops.
Compassion is not only about feeling—it is about movement.
A turning toward the other with a wish to relieve suffering.
It says:
I see your pain.
And I will not turn away.
In many ways, compassion is more demanding than empathy.
It asks something of us.
In Buddhist philosophy, compassion is seen as a fundamental virtue. Not because it feels good—but because it transforms how we meet suffering.
And in the Western tradition, thinkers like Aristotle described something similar through the concept of eleos—a response that can move us toward moral action.
This is where compassion becomes ethical.
It carries responsibility.
A Philosophical Reflection – Understanding Is Not Enough
This distinction has followed me into philosophy.
Empathy helps us understand.
Compassion helps us respond.
From a phenomenological perspective, empathy opens the world of the other to us. But it does not tell us what to do. That step belongs to compassion.
And this is where practical philosophy becomes real—not something abstract, but something lived.
In classrooms.
In hospital rooms.
In difficult conversations between people who struggle to understand each other.
We often believe that understanding is enough.
It is not.
In Practice – Where It Truly Matters
In my own field, this distinction is not theoretical.
A teacher may understand a struggling student—but without compassion, nothing changes.
A healthcare worker may recognize a patient’s pain—but without compassion, care becomes mechanical.
A society may understand inequality—but without compassion, justice remains distant.
Empathy creates connection.
Compassion creates change.
A Necessary Question – Can Compassion Go Too Far?
And yet, even compassion must be handled with care.
There is a quiet danger here.
Can compassion become a form of control?
A kind of “kindness” that overrides the other person’s autonomy?
The philosopher Martha Nussbaum reminds us that compassion must always be balanced with respect. Without that, it risks becoming paternalistic.
This is a difficult balance.
To care—without taking over.
To help—without diminishing the other.
Closing Reflection – Holding Both
If I were to put it simply, I would say this:
Empathy lets us feel the world of the other.
Compassion asks us what we will do with what we feel.
One without the other is incomplete.
Empathy without compassion can become passive—even paralyzing.
Compassion without empathy can become blind—even harsh.
But together, they form something deeply human.
A way of being in the world that holds both understanding and responsibility.
And perhaps this is where practical philosophy truly begins:
Not in what we know—
but in how we meet each other.
There is something I have learned about empathy through this.
Something that does not fit easily into definitions.
I have been told—more than once—that people like me, with an autism diagnosis, struggle with empathy.
That we do not feel what others feel.
But that is not my experience.
Sometimes I feel too much.
Sometimes another person’s pain does not stay “theirs.”
It moves into my body.
It becomes something I carry.
And yet, there is something I do not always understand.
So I ask: "How are you?"
And I have learned that this question can open a door.
Because empathy is not always about knowing.
Sometimes, it is about being willing to not know—and still stay.
To sit beside.
To listen.
To hold a hand.
Maybe this is what compassion looks like in practice:
Not perfect understanding.
Not the right words.
But presence.
A hand that does not withdraw.
A question that makes space.
A human being willing to remain.
I am still learning this.
That I do not need to read everything
to care deeply.
That asking is not a weakness.
It is a way of meeting the other.
And sometimes,
that is enough.
Here are some references for further reading:
Empathy, Compassion & Psychology
Batson, C. D. (2011). Altruism in humans. Oxford University Press.
Bloom, P. (2016). Against empathy: The case for rational compassion. Ecco.
Goetz, J. L., Keltner, D., & Simon-Thomas, E. (2010). Compassion: An evolutionary analysis and empirical review. Psychological Bulletin, 136(3), 351–374.
Singer, T., & Klimecki, O. M. (2014). Empathy and compassion. Current Biology, 24(18), R875–R878.
Phenomenology (your philosophical backbone)
Edmund Husserl (1989). Ideas pertaining to a pure phenomenology and to a phenomenological philosophy (Second Book). Kluwer.
Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1962). Phenomenology of perception. Routledge.
Zahavi, D. (2014). Self and other: Exploring subjectivity, empathy, and shame. Oxford University Press.
Ethics and Compassion
Martha Nussbaum (2001). Upheavals of thought: The intelligence of emotions. Cambridge University Press.
Aristotle (2009). Rhetoric (Book II, on eleos). Oxford University Press.
Dalai Lama. (1995). The power of compassion. HarperCollins.
Autism, Empathy & Misunderstanding
Baron-Cohen, S. (2011). Zero degrees of empathy. Penguin.
Milton, D. (2012). On the ontological status of autism: The ‘double empathy problem’. Disability & Society, 27(6), 883–887.
Hobson, R. P. (2002). The cradle of thought. Oxford University Press.
Practical Philosophy / Applied Context
Noddings, N. (2013). Caring: A relational approach to ethics and moral education. University of California Press.
Vetlesen, A. J. (1994). Perception, empathy, and judgment: An inquiry into the preconditions of moral performance. Penn State Press.
Optional (Nordic / Norwegian context)
Blystad, M. H., & Grøgaard, S. C. (2024). Empatiens mange ansikter. Tidsskrift for Norsk Psykologforening.
The text is mine, and Open AI/ChatGPT has made the illustration in conversation with me.