Roots of Sentience

Environmental Philosophy 21 (2):155-179 (2024)
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Abstract

Can we empathize with plants? Critics object that supposed empathy with plants entails anthropomorphic or zoomorphic projection. In reply, a phenomenological account of empathy claims to avoid this objection. However, phenomenological accounts of empathy center on one sentient (phenomenally conscious) mind accessing another. If plants are not sentient, then they appear to be inappropriate targets for empathy. I reply by exploring how the organic body is implicated in sentience, even if it is not usually focal. Interoceptive experience gives us indirect access to our own organic body, and thus provides a basis for a problematic, paradoxical empathy with plants.

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Hayden Kee
Chinese University of Hong Kong

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