Cognitive Empathy and Emotional Labor

https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/bicJ2CRS7neTfrPce/cognitive-empathy-and-emotional-labor-1

Link post The concept of emotional labor has been popularized in the last couple years as a way of talking about the work people do to manage other people’s emotions. Most of that discussion has been around how women are often expected to perform emotional labor without compensation both professionally and personally. Women report being asked to perform social glue functions in the workplace without it being part of their job, part of how they are evaluated, or part of how they are paid, and they are culturally expected to perform most of the emotional labor in personal relationships. And perhaps most frustratingly, while men are lauded when they perform emotional labor and mostly given a pass when they don’t, the situation is reversed for women who mostly only see punishment for not doing enough. But ultimately emotional labor is for everyone, and although there is a sex differential in its performance, there is little new I can say on that aspect of the topic. What I can say is something about how emotional labor is related to developmental psychology and cognitive empathy. Specifically, how skill at emotional labor depends on the development of cognitive empathy and lack of cognitive empathy is a limiting factor in being able to perform emotional labor. I described emotional labor as "managing other people’s emotions", but to be more precise emotional labor is acting to influence the emotions of others. To do this one must have some knowledge of the emotions of others and how they can be affected. This knowledge typically comes from either affective empathy or cognitive empathy. Affective empathy is feeling another person’s feelings, like being sad because your friend is sad or being scared because a character in a horror movie is scared. Affective empathy’s source is probably mirror neurons, and a lack of affective empathy is associated with sociopathy. For this reason affective empathy is sometimes also called "primitive" empathy because it seems to naturally develop on its own and is rarely missing in a person. Cognitive empathy, on the other hand, is the skill of thinking about others ontologically and is anything but "primitive". In order to be able to think of ways to make your friends happy or worry about what others will think of you, you must model other people and predict their responses. Those models can be simple, like how children employ thing and thing-relationship levels of phenomenological ontological complexity, but such simple models often fail if not backed up by affective empathy. As people age they build up enough cognitive empathy to effectively participate in society without necessarily feeling everyone’s feelings, and they develop system level and higher ontological complexity that enables cognitive empathy techniques like seeing other people as made up of parts, distinguishing others’ revealed and stated identities, and understanding others’ needs and wants. And if a person continues down this path they may develop a generalized sense of cognitive empathy that can tackle broad axiological questions about how to treat themselves and others. Yet affective empathy and cognitive empathy rarely exist in isolation. In the context of emotional labor, people often first feel — use affective empathy to notice — that an opportunity exists to affect someone else’s emotions, and then use cognitive empathy to figure out what to do. And when cognitive empathy fails us we may fall back on affectively informed actions. This will work most of the time, but pesky philosopher that I am, I want to know what happens in the edge cases, like when you can do something to hurt someone else’s feelings without them finding out. Consider the case of the broken vase. I’m having a fancy dinner party and you lend me your vase to use as a centerpiece. On the way home I stumble and drop the vase, shattering it into a million pieces. Luckily this happens right in front of a store where I can purchase an exact replica, so I immediately replace it. The dinner party goes well, and I "return" the vase with you unable to tell I’ve replaced it. I have two options: