Main content

Claudia Hammond looks at the role of empathy and asks who are we kind to. We find out if people are kinder in the city or the countryside and the benefits of talking to strangers.

In the Anatomy of Kindness Claudia Hammond asks who we are kind to. Professor Nichola Raihani from University College London says there are circles of connections, so family and friends, work colleagues, neighbours continuing out to everyone on the planet. Different people will put their boundaries in different places. One of the mechanisms we have to move these boundaries is empathy says Sara Konrath associate professor at the Lily Family School of Philanthropy. And being able to elicit empathy in strangers is an important part of raising awareness of challenging issues according to Lyndall Stein who has raised money for HIV, refugees and the homeless.
But how do we expand who us is, (whatever that means)? Sunder Katwaler of the think tank British Future says that in part it’s about making connections, which is something Gillian Sandstrom from the University of Sussex studies would agree with. She studies talking to strangers and why that is beneficial.

Presenter Claudia Hammond
Producer Geraldine Fitzgerald
Sound Engineer Sarah Hockley
Sound Designer Eleni Hassabis

Available now

28 minutes

Last on

Mon 28 Mar 2022 21:00

Broadcasts

  • Wed 23 Mar 2022 09:00
  • Mon 28 Mar 2022 21:00

Ten things we learned about kindness

Ten things we learned about kindness

Claudia Hammond presents the results of the world’s largest in-depth study on kindness.