Pityis asympatheticsorrowevoked by thesufferingof others. The word is comparable tocompassion,condolence,orempathy.It derives from the Latinpietas(etymon also ofpiety).Self-pityis pity directed towards oneself.
Two different kinds of pity can be distinguished, "benevolent pity" and "contemptuous pity".[1]In the latter, through insincere, pejorative usage, pity connotes feelings of superiority, condescension, or contempt.[2]
Psychological opinions
editPsychologists see pity arising in earlychildhoodout of the infant's ability to identify with others.[3]
Psychoanalysissees a more convoluted route to (at least some forms of) adult pity by way of the sublimation ofaggression—pity serving as a kind of magic gesture intended to show how leniently one should oneself be treated by one's own conscience.[4]
Religious views
editIn theWest,the religious concept of pity was reinforced after acceptance ofJudeo-Christianconcepts of God pitying all humanity, as found initially in the Jewish tradition: "Like as a father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them that fear him" (Psalms 103:13). The Hebrew wordhesedtranslated in theSeptuagintaseleoscarries the meaning roughly equivalent to pity in the sense of compassion, mercy, and loving-kindness.[6]
InMahayanaBuddhism, Bodhisattvas are described by theLotus Sutraas those who "hope to win final Nirvana for all beings—for the sake of the many, for their weal and happiness, out of pity for the world".[7]
Philosophical assessments
editAristotlein hisRhetoricargued that before a person can feel pity for another human, the person must first have experiencedsufferingof a similar type, and the person must also be somewhat distanced or removed from the sufferer.[8][9]He defines pity as follows: "Let pity, then, be a kind of pain in the case of an apparent destructive or painful harm of one not deserving to encounter it, which one might expect oneself, or one of one's own, to suffer, and this when it seems near".[9]Aristotle also pointed out that "people pity their acquaintances, provided that they are not exceedingly close in kinship; for concerning these they are disposed as they are concerning themselves", arguing further that in order to feel pity, a person must believe that the person who is suffering does notdeservetheir fate.[9]Developing a traditional Greek view in his work on poetry, Aristotle also defines tragedy as a kind of imitative poetry that provokes pity and fear.[10]
David Humein hisTreatise of Human Natureargued that "pity is concern for... the misery of others without any friendship... to occasion this concern."[11]He continues that pity "is derived from the imagination."[11]When one observes a person in misfortune, the observer initially imagines his sorrow, even though they may not feel the same. While "we blush for the conduct of those, who behave themselves foolishly before us; and that though they show no sense of shame, nor seem in the least conscious of their folly," Hume argues "that he is the more worthy of compassion the less sensible he is of his miserable condition."[11]
Jean-Jacques Rousseauhad the following opinion of pity as opposed to love for others:
It is therefore certain that pity is a natural sentiment, which, by moderating in every individual the activity of self-love, contributes to the mutual preservation of the whole species. It is this pity which hurries us without reflection to the assistance of those we see in distress; it is this pity which, in a state of nature, stands for laws, for manners, for virtue, with this advantage, that no one is tempted to disobey her sweet and gentle voice: it is this pity which will always hinder a robust savage from plundering a feeble child, or infirm old man, of the subsistence they have acquired with pain and difficulty, if he has but the least prospect of providing for himself by any other means: it is this pity which, instead of that sublime maxim of argumentative justice,Do to others as you would have others do to you,inspires all men with that other maxim of natural goodness a great deal less perfect, but perhaps more useful, Consult your own happiness with as little prejudice as you can to that of others. "[12]
Nietzschepointed out that since all people to some degree valueself-esteemandself-worth,pity can negatively affect any situation. Nietzsche considered his own sensitivity to pity a lifelong weakness;[13]and condemned what he called "Schopenhauer's morality of pity... pity negates life ".[14]
Medieval conceptions
editGeoffrey Chaucerwrote "pite renneth soone in gentil herte"at least ten times in his works, across theCanterbury Talesand theLegend of Good Women.[15]: 68 The word "pite"had enteredMiddle Englishfrom Latin "pietas"in seven spellings:"piete","pietie","pietye","pite","pitie","pyte",and"pytie".[16]: 15 Early Middle English writers did not yet have words such as "sympathy" and "empathy"; and even the word "compassion" is not attested in English until the 14th century.[17]: 72 The Mediaeval writer's notion of "pite"was thus somewhat different to the divided ideas of pity andpietyin Modern English, which has also since gained connotations of disengagement (the pitier as an observer to and separate from the pitied) and condescension from a superior position.[17]: 73
The many senses of the compound notion are exemplified by how Erasmus'Enchiridionwas translated in the 16th century.[16]: 15 In the original Latin, talking about the ways of the spirit versus the ways of the flesh, Erasmus says "spiritus pios, caro impios".[16]: 15 In translation, the single words in Latin became several phrases in English to encompass the entire range of the original concept, which was by that time bifurcating as the words were bifurcating: "[T]he spiryte maketh us relygyous, obedyent to god, kynde and mercyfull. The flesshe maketh us dispysers of god, disobedyent to god, unkynde and cruell."[16]: 15
Chaucer's line, described byWalter Skeatas being Chaucer's favourite, was understood byEdgar Finley Shannonto be a translation of Ovid'sTristiavolume 3, verses 31–32, Shannon describing it as "an admirable translation and adaptation of the passage".[15]: 68 A noble mind ( "mens generosa"in Ovid,"gentil herte"in Chaucer) is easily moved ("faciles motus capit"in Ovid,"renneth soone"in Chaucer) to kindness ("plababilis irae"in Ovid"pite"in Chaucer).[15]: 68–69 In theLegend,Chaucer describes women in general as "pyëtous".[18]: 32
It wasn't until the 16th century that there was a fully-fledged split between pity and piety.[19] In the 14th century,John Gowerwas, in contrast, using "pite"in hisConfessio Amantisto encompass both concepts, as his Latin glosses to the text reveal, stating that "pite is the foundement of every kinges regiment".[16]: 118–119 Cognates of the word include theProvençal"pietat"and theSpanish"piedad".[17]: 73 Like Middle English, Old French took the word from the Latin and gradually split it into "pité"(later"piété") and"pitié".[16]: 118 [20] Italianin contrast retained the one word: "pietà",borrowed into English (through French, in the 19th century replacing its older"Vierge de pitié") as a technical concept in the arts:pietà.[16]: 118 [20]
Literary examples
edit- Juvenalconsidered pity the noblest aspect of human nature.[21]
- MysticpoetWilliam Blakewas ambivalent about pity, initially casting it in a negative role, before viewing pity as an emotion that can draw beings together. InThe Book of Urizenpity begins when Los looks on the body of Urizen bound in chains.[22]: 13.50–51 However, Pity furthers the fall, "For pity divides the soul",[22]: 13.53 dividing Los and Enitharmon (Enitharmon is named Pity at her birth). Blake maintained that Pity disarmed righteous indignation leading to action; and, railing further against Pity inThe Human Abstract,Blake exclaims: "Pity would be no more, / If we did not make somebody Poor" (1–2).
- J. R. R. Tolkienmade pity—that of the hobbits for Gollum—pivotal to the action ofThe Lord of the Rings:[23]"It was Pity that stayed his hand... the pity of Bilbo may rule the fate of many".[24]
- Wilfred Owenprefaced his collection of war poetry with the claim that "My subject is War and the pity of War. The Poetry is in the pity"[25]—somethingC. H. Sissonconsidered to verge on sentimentality.[26]
See also
edit- Animism– Religious belief that objects, places, and creatures all possess a distinct spiritual essence
- Compassion– Moved or motivated to help others
- Dignity– Person's right to be valued, respected and treated ethically
- Empathy– Capacity to understand or feel what another person is experiencing
- Moral emotions– Variety of social emotions
- Pathetic fallacy– Attribution of human emotion and conduct to non-human things
- Social emotions– Emotions that depend upon other people
- Sympathy– Perception of, understanding of, and reaction to the distress or need of another being
References
edit- ^Kimball, Robert H. (2004). "A Plea for Pity".Philosophy & Rhetoric.37(4): 301–316.doi:10.1353/par.2004.0029.S2CID144602784.
- ^Godrej, Dinyar."Stuff Pity!".New Internationalist.
- ^Goleman, D. (1995).Emotional Intelligence.London. pp. 98–99.
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:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^Fenichel, O. (1946).The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis.London. p. 476.
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:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^Blake, William. "The Human Abstract".Songs of Innocence and of Experience.William Blake Archive,copy L, object 47 (Bentley 47, Erdman 47, Keynes 47)
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:CS1 maint: postscript (link) - ^Harris, R. Laird (ed.)."698a: ḥesed".Theological Wordbook of the Old Testament.Vol. 1. Chicago: Moody Press. p. 305.
- ^Conze, E., ed. (1959).Buddhist Scriptures.Penguin. p. 209.
- ^Aristotle.Rhetoric.II.8.
- ^abcDavid Konstan (2001).Pity Transformed.London: Duckworth. p. 181.ISBN0-7156-2904-2.
- ^Aristotle.Poetics.VI.1449b24–28.
- ^abcHume, David (1740). "Of Compassion".A Treatise of Human Nature.Vol. II.2.
- ^Rousseau, Jean-Jacques (2004) [1755].Discourse on the origin of inequality.Mineola: Dover. p. 21.
- ^Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm (1987) [1884]. "Letters". In Kaufmann, Walter (ed.).The Portable Nietzsche.London. p. 440.
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:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm (1987) [1888]. "Twilight of the Idols/The Antichrist". In Kaufmann, Walter (ed.).The Portable Nietzsche.London. pp. 540 & 573.
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:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^abcHoffman, Richard L. (2016).Ovid and the Canterbury Tales.University of Pennsylvania Press.ISBN978-1-5128-0240-5.
- ^abcdefgGarrison, James D. (2010).Pietas from Vergil to Dryden.Penn State Press.ISBN978-0-271-04284-8.
- ^abcLazikani, A.S. (2015).Cultivating the Heart: Feeling and Emotion in Twelfth- and Thirteenth-Century Religious Texts.University of Wales Press.ISBN978-1-78316-265-9.
- ^Mann, Jill (2002).Feminizing Chaucer.Chaucer studies. Vol. 30. Boydell & Brewer Ltd.ISBN978-0-85991-613-4.ISSN0261-9822.
- ^
- Hardman, Malcolm (2017). "The pity of war".Global Dilemmas: Imperial Bolton-le-Moors from the Hungry Forties to the Death of Leverhulme.Rowman & Littlefield. p. 272.ISBN978-1-61147-903-4.
- Bon, Bruno; Guerreau-Jalabert, Anita (2002)."Pietas: réflexions sur l'analyse sémantique et le traitement lexicographique d'un vocable médiéval".Médiévales(in French).21(42): 78.doi:10.3406/medi.2002.1540.
- ^abColot, Blandine (2014). "pietas". In Cassin, Barbara; Apter, Emily; Lezra, Jacques; Wood, Michael (eds.).Dictionary of Untranslatables: A Philosophical Lexicon.Princeton University Press. p. 785.ISBN978-1-4008-4991-8.
- ^Juvenal (1925). Duff, J. D. (ed.).Fourteen Satires of Juvenal.Cambridge. p. 450.
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:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^abBlake, William (1794).The Book of Urizen.
- ^Shippey, T. (2001).J. R. R. Tolkien.London. p. 143.
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:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^Tolkien, J. R. R. (1991).The Fellowship of the Ring.London. p. 58.
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:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^Owen, Wilfred (1985). Silkin, J. (ed.).Wilfred Owen: The Poems.Penguin. p. 43.
- ^Sisson, C. H. (1981).English Poetry 1900–1950.Manchester. p. 83.
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:CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Further reading
edit- Hume, David (1975) [1751]. "An Enquiry concerning the Principles of Morals". In Selby-Bigge, L.A.; Nidditch, P.H. (eds.).Enquires concerning Human Understanding and concerning the Principles of Morals.Oxford: Oxford University Press. Sec. VI Part II, p. 248, n.1.
- Konstan, David (2001).Pity Transformed.London: Bristol Classical Press. p. 181.ISBN0-7156-2904-2.
- Sánchez, Gonzalo J. (2004).Pity in Fin-de-siècle French Culture: "liberté, Égalité, Pitié".Greenwood Publishing Group.ISBN978-0-275-98000-9.
- Tudor, Stephen (2000).Compassion and Remorse: Acknowledging the Suffering Other.Leuven: Peeters.
- Wispé, Lauren (1991).The Psychology of Sympathy.New York, N.Y.: Springer Science & Business Media.ISBN978-0-306-43798-4.
External links
edit- The dictionary definition ofpityat Wiktionary