Sympathy and the Non-human: Max Scheler’s Phenomenology of Interrelation

Original Articles

Sympathy and the Non-human: Max Scheler’s Phenomenology of Interrelation

DOI: 10.1080/20797222.2007.11433948

Abstract

German phenomenologist and sociologist Max Scheler accorded sympathy a central role in his philosophy, arguing that sympathy enables not only ethical behaviour, but also knowledge of animate and inanimate others. Influenced by Catholicism and especially St Francis, Scheler envisioned a broad, cosmic sympathy forming the hidden basis for all human values, with the “higher” religious, artistic, philosophic and other cultural values enabled by a more basic regard for non-human nature and insights gained from the human situation within the non-human world. Sympathy for the non-human is thus both integral and fundamental to the cultivation of other values in the development of both the human person and humanity in general.

Get new issue alerts for Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology