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Cultivating Sympathy: Sophie Condorcet's Letters on Sympathy

Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2001
In 1798, Sophie de Grouchy, the marquise de Condorcet, published a translation of the seventh edition of Adam Smith'sTheory of Moral Sentiments(1792), along with a series of eight “letters” on the subject of sympathy. These letters are, in fact, substantial essays that allow us to discern how she read Smith.
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Feelings of sympathy

2016
This chapter argues that the production of queer liberalism is central to the affective politics of LGBT asylum: discourses on suffering and sympathy are central in the self-representation of queer liberals as sexual citizens with a claim to the state; and discourses on potential happiness are catalysts in the representation of refugees as an ...
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Sympathy for Brutus

1976
When Shakespeare began to write Julius Caesar in 1598 or 1599, he had not attempted a tragedy for several years. He could have looked back complacently to one of his earlier successes, Titus Andronicus or Romeo and Juliet, Richard III or Richard II, and simply repeated a formula that had already proved its worth.1 But Shakespeare was not in the habit ...
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Sympathy as the Basis of Compassion

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 1995
On one side of his sign board, a nineteenth century surgeon depicted a physician operating on a patient's leg; the other side showed the Good Samaritan taking care of the victim's wounds. Christ's parable has often been quoted and depicted as a primary example of human compassion, to be followed by all persons and,a fortiori, by so-called professionals
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Sympathy

2015
Our modern-day word for sympathy is derived from the classical Greek word for fellow-feeling. Both in the vernacular as well as in the various specialist literatures within philosophy, psychology, neuroscience, economics, and history, "sympathy" and "empathy" are routinely conflated.
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Sympathy for the Rich

2016
This chapter turns to the question of how, precisely, John Adams understood wealth to translate into political influence. It shows that Adams was a careful student of the Scottish Enlightenment. More than any other Founding Era American, he engaged with the long tradition of thought that emphasized the psychological bases of social and political power.
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Opportunity Not Sympathy

Journal of Art & Design Education, 1994
This paper reports on a national pilot project to train professional artists to work with children with special educational needs. It presents an introductory review of recent legislation and research in Special Educational Needs in the UK and in the USA. The paper offers an alternative view of disability, more able to accommodate the needs of children
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Sympathy and Sentiment

1982
Large claims have been made for Sterne’s sentimentalism. R. F. Brissenden says that without it, Tristram Shandy would not be a real novel: ‘What transforms Tristram Shandy from an exercise in learned satire or dramatic rhetoric or obscure bawdry is primarily its sentimentalism.’1 John Traugott even goes so far as to claim that sentimentalism is ...
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Sympathy for the Devil

Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2016
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