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The Empathy Ceiling: The Rich Are Different — And Not In a Good Way, Studies Suggest
The 'Haves' show less empathy than 'Have-nots'
Psychologist and social scientist Dacher Keltner says the rich really are different, and not in a good way: Their life experience makes them less empathetic, less altruistic, and generally more selfish.
Lissette Gutierrez chose a pair of $1,495 Christian Louboutin shoes at Bergdorf Goodman in Manhattan. An article called “Social Class as Culture: The Convergence of Resources and Rank in the Social Realm,” published this week in the journal Current Directions in Psychological Science, argues that rich people are more likely to think about themselves. Because the rich gloss over the ways family connections, money and education helped, they come to denigrate the role of government and vigorously oppose taxes to fund it. (Deidre Schoo for The New York Times) In fact, he says, the philosophical battle over economics, taxes, debt ceilings and defaults that are now roiling the stock market is partly rooted in an upper class "ideology of self-interest."
“We have now done 12 separate studies measuring empathy in every way imaginable, social behavior in every way, and some work on compassion and it’s the same story,” he said. “Lower class people just show more empathy, more prosocial behavior, more compassion, no matter how you look at it.”
In an academic version of a Depression-era Frank Capra movie, Keltner and co-authors of an article called “Social Class as Culture: The Convergence of Resources and Rank in the Social Realm,” published this week in the journal Current Directions in Psychological Science, argue that “upper-class rank perceptions trigger a focus away from the context toward the self….”
In other words, rich people are more likely to think about themselves. “They think that economic success and political outcomes, and personal outcomes, have to do with individual behavior, a good work ethic,” said Keltner, a professor of psychology at the University of California, Berkeley.
Because the rich gloss over the ways family connections, money and education helped, they come to denigrate the role of government and vigorously oppose taxes to fund it.
“I will quote from the Tea Party hero Ayn Rand: “‘It is the morality of altruism that men have to reject,’” he said.
Whether or not Keltner is right, there certainly is a “let them cake” vibe in the air. Last week The New York Times reported on booming sales of luxury goods, with stores keeping waiting lists for $9,000 coats and the former chairman of Saks saying, “If a designer shoe goes up from $800 to $860, who notices?”
According to Gallup, Americans earning more than $90,000 per year continued to increase their consumer spending in July while middle- and lower-income Americans remained stalled, even as the upper classes argue that they can’t pay any more taxes. Meanwhile, the gap between the wealthiest and the rest of us continues to grow wider, with over 80 percent of the nation’s financial wealth controlled by about 20 percent of the people.
Unlike the rich, lower class people have to depend on others for survival, Keltner argued. So they learn “prosocial behaviors.” They read people better, empathize more with others, and they give more to those in need.
That’s the moral of Capra movies like “You Can’t Take It With You,” in which a plutocrat comes to learn the value of community and family. But Keltner, author of the book “Born To Be Good: The Science of A Meaningful Life,” doesn’t rely on sentiment to make his case.
He points to his own research and that of others. For example, lower class subjects are better at deciphering the emotions of people in photographs than are rich people.
In video recordings of conversations, rich people are more likely to appear distracted, checking cell phones, doodling, avoiding eye contact, while low-income people make eye contact and nod their heads more frequently signaling engagement.
In one test, for example, Keltner and other colleagues had 115 people play the “dictator game,” a standard trial of economic behavior. “Dictators” were paired with an unseen partner, given ten “points” that represented money, and told they could share as many or as few of the points with the partner as they desired. Lower-class participants gave more even after controlling for gender, age or ethnicity.
Keltner has also studied vagus nerve activation. The vagus nerve helps the brain record and respond to emotional inputs. When subjects are exposed to pictures of starving children, for example, their vagus nerve typically becomes more active as measured by electrodes on their chests and a sensor band around their waists. In recent tests, yet to be published, Keltner has found that those from lower-class backgrounds have more intense activation.
Other studies from other researchers have not produced the clear-cut results Keltner uses to advance his argument. In surveys of charitable giving, some show that low-income people give more, but other studies show the opposite.
“The research regarding income and helping behaviors has always been little bit mixed,” explained Meredith McGinley, a professor of psychology at Pittsburgh’s Chatham University.
Then there is the problem of Tea Partiers’ own class position. While they are funded by the wealthy, many do not identify themselves as wealthy (though there is dispute on the real demographics). Still, a strong allegiance to the American Dream can lead even regular folks to overestimate their own self-reliance in the same way as rich people.
As behavioral economist Mark Wilhelm of Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis pointed out, most people could quickly tell you how much they paid in taxes last year but few could put a dollar amount on how they benefited from government by, say, driving on interstate highways, taking drugs gleaned from federally funded medical research, or using inventions created by people educated in public schools.
There is one interesting piece of evidence showing that many rich people may not be selfish as much as willfully clueless, and therefore unable to make the cognitive link between need and resources. Last year, research at Duke and Harvard universities showed that regardless of political affiliation or income, Americans tended to think wealth distribution ought to be more equal.
The problem? Rich people wrongly believed it already was.
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125 Comments so far
Show AllHow many times larger than the eye of a needle is an adult camel? We must save the doomed souls of the powerfully rich and the richly powerful by assuring that they die destitute and powerless.
As I have said many times, the difference between someone who has HAD a maid and someone who has BEEN a maid is a gulf too big to bridge.
Because they lack empathy,and because too much is never enough, they are never able to recognize at any level the ripple effect their actions have on the rest of society/ humanity. They are never able to glimpse even for a moment what Buddhists call the inconnectedness of all being. As a result they create such turmoil that eventually everything that created their wealth, like a house of cards, collapses.
Look at all the "bubbles" in the markets. Consider most of the "wealth" that exists in it is theoretical, ie it is tied up in fictional creations of debt and financing, not in real, mensurate goods and services.
Like a cancer, they eventually destroy their host, and therefore, themselves in the process.
Perhaps now it won't be long before we see them jumping out of windows again.
Definitely some truth to this, be it chicken or the egg. However, I sometimes ask myself if I've given up 10 percent of what I have to help people in the rest of the world that are suffering. For a long time America has consumed a great share of the world's wealth and resources to buy toys instead of lifting the third-world. It's no fun when there is a group throwing a party while you're having a hard time...------------------------------------------------------------------------------"I still care about people, but it would be so much easier not to care, it's too hard to care." --Andy Warhol
wow, how about researching something we don't already know!
I don't know what income level make you middle class but where I live $90,000 is a decent secretary's salary. Of course an ordinary house is $1.5 million also.
I have just one thing to say to this article......Da!!!!!!
the really shocking thing about this article is it came from MSNBC
I wonder how many of the commentators have read The Gospel of Wealth, as it's certainly a study of sorts by an individual who went from rags to riches. That his prescription for how to behave once wealthy isn't followed very closely (I doubt many have ever heard of the work) doesn't negate Carnegie's attempt to overcome his guilt about his wealth. But, admittedly, he was rare. Like de Sade, the rich are Libertines. Purging the planet of billionaires would be a good thing; politicians too.
This is another point in favor of my urging for a General Strike movement (a la Lech Walesa) in order to shut down the oligarchs and take back Amerika. I am not a collectivist, but I believe that a strong labor movement is the most powerful force, and possibly the only peaceful to counteract the banksters and war machine and their oligarch/technocrat minions. We MUST strike. Union or no, we must have work stoppages. However, I sadly doubt it will happen until we have nothing to lose, which is when revolutions begin - those with nothing to lose finally act. By then, however, it is a bloody mess and people will unfortunately die on both sides, and lives will be ruined. I am sorry to say, it may be what this country needs to right itself.
The MAIN issue is......to rid ourselves of DEBT BASED CURRENCY. This is the root of poverty in the modern era. Please investigate it for yourselves.
A few quotes from Thomas Jefferson:
“Every generation needs a new revolution.”
“When it is obvious that the goals cannot be reached, don't adjust the goals, adjust the action steps.”
“If once the people become inattentive to the public affairs, you and I, and Congress and Assemblies, Judges and Governors, shall all become wolves."
"If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around them will deprive the people of all property until their children wake up homeless on the continent their Fathers conquered...I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies... The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs."
"The democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not."
"The tree of Liberty needs to be watered from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants."
David Rockefeller: "We are grateful to the Washington Post, The New York Times, Time Magazine and other great publications whose directors have attended our meetings and respected their promises of discretion for almost forty years. It would have been impossible for us to develop our plan for the world if we had been subjected to the lights of publicity during those years. But, the world is now more sophisticated and prepared to march towards a world government. The supranational sovereignty of an intellectual elite and world bankers is surely preferable to the national auto-determination practiced in past centuries."
...люди могут быть не столько эгоистичны, сколько преднамеренно\добровольно невежественны, и потому не способны понять связь между надо и есть.
(... people may not be selfish as much as willfully clueless, and therefore unable to make the cognitive link between need and resources.)
I can't stand when someone cites a source in an article yet provides no link to the source or even an abstract of it. This article has some interesting information, but then cops out into the typical "he said/she said" worthlessness which passes for "journalism" in too much of the Corporate Media.
Here's a link to the publication. The full article is available to subscribes, but in any event, it can be found here. http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/news/releases/social-class-as-culture.html#hide (Press Release)
A further resources to learn more about empathy and compassion.
The Center for Building a Culture of Empathy - is the largest internet portal for resources and information about the values of empathy and compassion. It contains articles, conferences, definitions, experts, history, interviews, videos, science and much more about empathy and compassion.
http://CultureOfEmpathy.com
I posted a link to your article in our
Empathy and Compassion Magazine
The latest news about empathy and compassion from around the world
http://bit.ly/dSXjfF
"...willfully clueless..."<><> Mmmmm...should be easy to trap.<><> I like colbertsuperpac dot com <><> The economy is then tricked-out to concentrate wealth/power, imbalance is produced, and collapse follows. Game over. Let's just declare them the winner, drop their money from helicopters and start over.<><> The enabling vehicle for this fiasco is the corporation--- it floats these "willfully clueless" (w.c.) to the top of the system, and gives them cover for irresponsible, even criminal behaviors. <><> The system cannot self-correct. <><> And it is not sustainable. <><> If the w.c. could know what the poor know about how it ends and how to cope, the w.c. might develop different priorities. <><> (OK. That last was unrealistic;-)
If you are going to make racist statements like this, cite a source. Then you won't sound like an ignorant creep, just a creep. Anecdotal evidence from my own experience is useless, I know, but the last person who told me he was going to reluctantly vote for Bush in order to "protect my wealth" was Korean-American. I often wonder how he feels about that decision now...
SO NOT TRUE. YOU'RE DISGUSTING AND YOU'RE WRONG.
Get off this site you vile Anti Semite.
Where are the goddamned monitors? Hello?...
Many decades ago I was a scholarship student at a selective private East Coast college. There, for the first time in my life, I ate dinner with DuPonts and the like. What struck me immediately as different about us was that, on the whole, wealthy kids did not believe that their parents loved and valued them. I had grown up eating dinner with my parents and siblings every night, often arguing over the war in Vietnam or whether God was dead. (I fought bitterly with my parents during high school over everything imaginable.)
The rich kids at college had been brought up by servants. They had gone from boarding school to summer camp to home for Christmas with their nanny -- while their parents went skiing in St. Moritz (or, ok, Aspen). As I became more interested in observing how they described their relationship with their parents, it struck me that most of them thought they only had value to their parents if they succeeded and became an ornament to the family.
I could not help being reminded of this while reading this article. Now I worry a lot about the fact that middle class and poor families have stopped eating dinner together. (School teachers, back me up on this one.)
This mirrors my experience as well. I went on full scholarship freshman year to a small private, East Coast, liberal arts Presbyterian college that specialized in the less academically gifted siblings of Ivy League scholars. I was invited to the home of one family 2 different long weekends, went with another family skiing in Sun Valley and the remaining set of 2 visits were to the home of a Presbyterian minister/missionary of Boston Brahmin stock.
The first home was magnificent in every sense of the word materially but completely spiritually barren. I saw the mom once as she drifted through the room to go upstairs, my chum addressed her mom and her mom actually raised her hand palm to us, in a "not now" gesture. My friend told me that's how it always was. She was dressed in Ted Lapidus couture, had an eating disorder and married someone she never sees, just like her mom did.
I was invited to go on a "family ski vacation" by another friend. We left from the same airport but on different flights from the rest of the family, had our own car, adjoining suites but doors not open, carte blanche dining and ski shop, etc When I asked,"When are we going to be doing stuff with your family?" I was told, "Oh we are." It was like an out of body experience for me. I had been having fun up until that point but after that it was too weird.
The last family were entirely different. They were sweet, gracious, funny, everyone ate dinner together and both the parents went out of their way to welcome me, ask about my interests, background and scheduled activities together. They were real. They were also the "black sheep" of their families, he for going to Divinity School and living by its precepts, and she for marrying him, instead of who ever Mummy had picked out.
The rest of the students there on campus were easily divided into the middle class wannabees, old money, and new rich snobs. I have to say that the new rich were the most obnoxious. The older wealth families, while it was clear I wasn't one of them, didn't find it necessary to point it out. Most of the middle class students there were females looking to get their Mrs., preferably one of the pre-winnowed eligible rich WASPs. I felt really out of place there and transferred to a State University after that, but it was a fascinating social experiment.
One other detail I should add was I was one of 3 females in our 31 female dorm that did NOT have an eating disorder. The other non-Greek women's dorm had approximately 5 or 6 that were not bulimic,anorexic, purging or exercise addicted out of 60. It seems to be a truism for the upper class that one cannot be too rich or too thin.
The rich are inbred narcissists, sociopaths, psychopths and megalomainaics and that's all folks.
If I were Mr. Alexander's editor I would change "lower" to "working" and "rich" to "ruling class."