Behavioral and Brain Sciences



Short Communication

Reflexive empathy: On predicting more than has ever been observed


Albert Bandura a1
a1 Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305 Bandura@p1sych.stanford.edu

Abstract

A model positing that perception of another's affective state automatically generates matching emotional and instrumental responses predicts more than has ever been observed. Reflexive empathicness would produce emotional exhaustion, inhibitory strain, and debilitate everyday functioning. Self-regulation of empathic responses involves, not only reactive inhibition, but agentic proactive control. Pervasive inhumanities involve selective disengagement of empathic restraints through dissociative psychosocial mechanisms.