You are currently logged-out. You can log-in or create an account to see more talks, save favorites, and more. more info

Compassion Talks

Compassion is a social feeling that motivates people to go out of their way to relieve the physical, mental, or emotional pains of others and themselves. Compassion is sensitivity to the emotional aspects of the suffering of others. When based on notions such as fairness, justice, and interdependence, it may be considered partially rational in nature.

Compassion involves "feeling for another" and is a precursor to empathy, the "feeling as another" capacity (as opposed to sympathy, the "feeling towards another"). In common parlance, active compassion is the desire to alleviate another's suffering.

Compassion involves allowing oneself to be moved by suffering to help alleviate and prevent it. An act of compassion is one that is intended to be helpful. Other virtues that harmonize with compassion include patience, wisdom, kindness, perseverance, warmth, and resolve. It is often, though not inevitably, the key component in altruism. The difference between sympathy and compassion is that the former responds to others' suffering with sorrow and concern whereas the latter responds with warmth and care. An article in Clinical Psychology Review suggests that "compassion consists of three facets: noticing, feeling, and responding".

In Buddhism, compassion is the heartfelt wish to relieve the suffering of all beings, paired with the courage to act. Compassionate actions plant seeds of joy in others—and in ourselves—making them a true source of lasting happiness.

From compassion on Wikipedia

Showing 288 talks
 

- Reset Search

Title Speaker

Insight of Buddhism

Serial: SF-01949

Date given as 1988.04.28 on cassette

Time, Compassion, Meditation
May 28 1988
San Francisco Zen Center

Yontenzot

Serial: SF-01831

"Chhoje Tulku"

Bodhisattva, Compassion, Time
Apr 24 1988
San Francisco Zen Center

Sunday Lecture

Bodhisattva, Time, Compassion
Jul 25 1987
Green Gulch Farm

Pages