Kinesthetic sympathy
Kinesthetic sympathy is the state of having an emotional attachment to an object when it is in hand which one does not have when it is out of sight.
Concept
The concept of kinesthetic sympathy is associated with John Martin, a dance critic. He introduced it in a New York Times article that discussed how the audience members respond to movements of the dancers on stage. Such response is said to transpire subconsciously. According to Martin, "when we see a human body moving, we see movement which is potentially producible by any human body and therefore by our own." This link allows humans to reproduce the movement in their present muscular experience and even awaken its connotations as if the perceived movement was their own. What this means is that an individual - through kinesthetic sympathy - could perform movements that are beyond his body's capacities.Kinesthetic sympathy is linked to the concept of kinesthetic empathy, which pertains to the embodied experience of movement emotion.