2014년 10월 25일 토요일

First Draft


First Draft

Humans usually understand other’s emotions and their actions. For example, they can feel sorrow when they see someone in pain. Or, they can understand why someone did some acts even when they are not in that situation. And as ‘Harvard Sampler’ says that human ability is both innate and acquired, empathy ability is as well. It is true that a person's empathy ability is influenced by his or her experience and environment, but I argue that an empathy ability is more likely innate, so it is hard to change.
There are three supporting reasons. First, feeling other’s emotions is not just invoking memory from the brain but it is closely related to certain human brain action. And, people who innately have disease 'Altruism' cannot truly improve their empathy ability. In addition, the empathy among nonhuman animals can support my argument.
 
Before arguing, I will summarize some relevant background materials. First, I will explain how 'mirror neurons' had discovered and have studied. A mirror neuron is a neuron that fires both when the animal observes the same action performed by another. Thus, observer looking at other acting, it feels as though itself is acting. In humans, brain activity consistent with that of mirror neurons has been found in the premotor cortex, the supplementary motor area, the primary somatosensory cortex and the inferior parietal cortex.(These are parts of a brain.)
Mirror neuron was found during neurophysiologists performing experiment about monkey's action and its brain. During the experiment, monkeys were allowed to reach for pieces of food and single neuron in its brain was recorded. Researchers found that some of the neurons respond when the monkey see someone pick up the food as well as when monkey pickup the food. In other words, some neurons in monkey's brain responded when they see a person's action as the monkey itself acts. Later, researchers confirmed that about 10% of neurons in the monkey's inferior frontal and inferior parietal cortex mirror and respond similarly to performed hand action.
However, there are some problem not yet solved about mirror neurons. There are neuroscientists who caution that the claims being made for the role of mirror neurons are not supported by adequate research. Also, it is not normally possible to study single neuron in the human brain.
As second material, here is the definition of autism. Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and autism are both general terms for a group of complex disorders of brain development. People with these disorders usually have difficulties in social interaction, verbal and nonverbal communication and repetitive behaviors.
Finally, the theory of mind means the cognitive ability that can imagine and understand other's perspective.
I will start confirmation with the 'mirror neurons'. Mirror neuron is the special neuron cell which was found in the brain of primate including human. It fires when observe other acting even though the observer doesn't act. The existence of mirror neuron can show that the ability to empathize is influenced more by innate environment.
It might be right that the experience a person get can affect his or her empathy ability. However, person cannot experience everything in the world. Nonetheless, a person can empathize almost every emotions that others have. For example, when a person sees children who suffer from starvation through the television, that person might feel sad, sympathize. It might be not because that person has suffered from the starvation as well. Thus, it says the empathy is the inherent ability, and the experience is only to make deeper and more specific empathy.
As the second supporting, I'll tell about the 'Autism'. One of the symptoms of autism is a lack of empathy. People with autism may have difficulty understanding another person's feelings, such as pain or sorrow.
Autism is inherent disorder. Thus, that a person with autism lacks the empathy ability show empathy is also inherent ability. Some may say people with autism can be taught empathy. For example, mother would teach his son with autism that he should say sorry when he steps on someone's foot. The son might be able to mother's saying, but it is not empathy, but only the respond in a certain situation.
Third, the empathy among nonhuman animals and empathy in children can support my argument.
Empathy in animals can be observed through the following experiment.
(In one experiment, 15 rhesus monkeys were trained to get food by pulling chains. Monkeys quickly learned that one chain delivered twice as much food than the other. But then the rules changed. If a monkey pulled the chain associated with the bigger reward, another “bystander” monkey received an electric shock. After they saw their conspecific get a shock, 10 of the monkeys switched their preferences to the chain associated with the lesser food reward. Two other monkeys stopped pulling either chain—preferring to starve rather than see another monkey in pain (Masserman et al. 1964):
Animals are more likely to have difficulties in experiencing. Thus, according to this experiment, animals can empathize even though they don't have experience.
Also, empathy in children can be observed in this following experiment.(New research by neuroscientist Jean Decety suggests a fascinating neurological link between our own, first-hand experience of pain and our perception of pain in other people. When typically developing kids (aged 7 to 12 years) were presented with images of people getting hurt, the kids experienced more activity in the same neural circuits that process first-hand experiences of pain (Decety et al 2008).
Empathy can be thought not inherent. Some may think infants doesn't have any empathizing ability, but it is only built up through their experiences. It is because young children cannot empathize something they have not yet experienced. As they grow up, they usually get to understand them. Thus, they would argue that empathy is not an inherent ability. But I want to argue that it is not true because there exist some cases observable that show empathy without experience about the situation. It might be true that experience can affect empathy. But it only helps to make deeper and more specific empathy.
 
Empathy an is ability that can understand others' feeling or action. Empathy is not just the imaginations or ideas. It is related to human brains biologically and psychologically. And I argue that empathy is the inherent ability. And I give three supporting: mirror neuron, Autism, and the existence of empathy both in animals and children.
 
reference:
 

댓글 없음:

댓글 쓰기