# Reasoning and empathy are not competing but complementary features of altruism

**Authors:** Kyle Fiore Law, Stylianos Syropoulos, Paige Amormino, Abigail Marsh, Liane Young, Brendan Bo O’Connor

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgag015 · PNAS Nexus · 2026-01-20

## TL;DR

The study shows that both empathy and reasoning work together to help people act altruistically toward strangers, challenging the idea that they are opposites.

## Contribution

It demonstrates that empathy and reasoning are complementary, not competing, in driving expansive altruism.

## Key findings

- Effective altruists show higher reasoning, while extraordinary altruists show higher empathy.
- Both empathy and reasoning independently predict greater altruistic behavior in experiments.
- Combining empathy and reasoning increases willingness to prioritize impartial welfare and maximize impact.

## Abstract

Humans can care about distant strangers, an adaptive advantage that enables our species to cooperate in increasingly large-scale groups. Theoretical frameworks accounting for an expansive moral circle and altruistic behavior are often framed as a dichotomy between competing pathways of emotion-driven empathy versus logic-driven reasoning. Here, in a pre-registered investigation comparing variations in empathy and reasoning capacities across different exceptionally altruistic populations—effective altruists (EAs) who aim to maximize welfare gains with their charitable contributions (N = 119) and extraordinary altruists (XAs) who have donated organs to strangers (N = 65)—alongside a third sample of demographically similar general population controls (N = 176), we assess how both capacities associate with altruistic behaviors that transcend conventional parochial boundaries. We find that, while EAs generally manifest heightened reasoning ability and XAs heightened empathic ability, both empathy and reasoning independently predict greater engagement in equitable and effective altruism on laboratory measures and behavioral tasks. Interaction effects suggest empathy and reasoning, when combined, often predict the strongest willingness to prioritize welfare impartially and maximize impact. These results suggest complementary candidate roles for empathy and reasoning in overcoming biases that constrain altruism, supporting a unified framework for expansive altruism and challenging the empathy-reasoning dichotomy in existing theory.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12887898/full.md

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12887898/full.md

## References

100 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12887898/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12887898