Examined Life: Martha Nussbaum

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  • Опубліковано 10 лют 2025
  • The eminent Martha Nussbaum, Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics at the University of Chicago, speaks on the Aristotelian foundations of her capabilities approach and its implications on the modern political atmosphere while walking along Chicago's beautiful lakeshore.
    From "Examined Life," directed by Astra Taylor, released in 2008.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 122

  • @lkolivakis
    @lkolivakis 9 років тому +35

    Charles Taylor, Martha Nussbaum, Michael Walzer and Isaiah Berlin have provided me with so much food for thought. Thank you for this short and insightful clip.

  • @fechermichael08
    @fechermichael08 15 років тому +9

    Very moving. The capabilities approach is quite a treasure. Thank God for Martha Nussbaum.

  • @ursulamaryblythe2107
    @ursulamaryblythe2107 4 роки тому +6

    Spot on, particularly during the current global pandemic. Care and Capabilities all the way, thanks Martha Nussbaum for raising awareness within Ethics, Law, and Inclusion.

    • @hassu2149
      @hassu2149 3 роки тому

      How would you summarize this video?

  • @patriciam1550
    @patriciam1550 4 роки тому +20

    Just discovered Martha Nussbaum. She is inspiring! Thank you for making this clip. I can't wait to read/listen to more of her work.

    • @sacredmetaphics
      @sacredmetaphics 2 роки тому +2

      I just discovered Martha Nussbaum last week. What a treasure.

  • @lolmuze
    @lolmuze 11 років тому +17

    Simply Brilliant. I'm so happy to even walk the same halls as she does!

  • @andrewcrane5250
    @andrewcrane5250 10 років тому +5

    I love how love is her science at a core

    • @Ot-ej5gi
      @Ot-ej5gi 4 роки тому

      It's just HER opinion; it could be right OR wrong. She isn't God, stop worshipping people. No matter how great they seem to be, when they say something that is just an opinion, it is just that. Additionally, humility is a sign of a truly great person. Just stating an opinion and expecting it to be an axiom is self-righteous at best.

  • @quaesitor
    @quaesitor 6 років тому +4

    martha makes such a case for sane and ... even good living. someone to read, for sure

    • @quaesitor
      @quaesitor 6 років тому

      and by living i mean not just OUR own lives, but living TOGETHER

  • @JustCamus
    @JustCamus 12 років тому +1

    Thank you for sharing this video. Nussbaum is no hack. I like that she's more pragmatic than many other thinkers.

  • @fuzzyone99
    @fuzzyone99 11 років тому +23

    Nussbaum is pretty smart.

  • @solomonabhi
    @solomonabhi 14 років тому +4

    Very insightful. Clearly communicated and indeed an adept use of youtube.

  • @jseidel80
    @jseidel80 10 років тому +8

    I immediately thought of Maslow. It seems to me that his hierarchy of needs supports the capabilities approach.

  • @Bryan-s3x
    @Bryan-s3x 6 місяців тому

    Just so great❤

  • @miseryandco2
    @miseryandco2 10 років тому +7

    I think the song in the background is from Tom Waits (Dead and Lovely)

    • @ryanjavierortega8513
      @ryanjavierortega8513 9 років тому +3

      +Rz2750* The director is married to Jeff Mangum, who probably had something to do with the music selections. Neutral Milk Hotel rocks!

  • @neoepicurean3772
    @neoepicurean3772 4 роки тому +7

    7:25 - the concluding thought: people get together to form societies that result in benefits because of a capacity to love - but this is surely the wrong way to look at it - people's love of societies is a result of societies being the sort of thing that offers benefits.

    • @Ot-ej5gi
      @Ot-ej5gi 4 роки тому +1

      100 % true:)

    • @mafiomateo
      @mafiomateo 4 місяці тому

      What society offers benefits, and what people love societies?

  • @kevinwright8431
    @kevinwright8431 2 роки тому

    I saw you first on Bryan Magee's programme on philosophy. Social justice is still very relevant.

  • @alexasmithy
    @alexasmithy 13 років тому +4

    really informative and interesting

  • @djvelocipede1775
    @djvelocipede1775 2 роки тому

    FanTASTIC! What a brain what a setting

  • @dan2dos2zwei
    @dan2dos2zwei 15 років тому

    Oh my God. Martha Nussbaum is the greatest philosopher. She is so good at bridging academia and humanity. Best philosopher ever.

  • @alexasmithy
    @alexasmithy 13 років тому

    brilliant video

  • @MichaelRCarlson
    @MichaelRCarlson 13 років тому +5

    Cont: So in the spirit of the limited discourse allowed here, I will sum up by saying I could argue that there could be a moral obligation NOT to pay taxes when that tax money is used for unjust things. It's not that the government does nothing good but that enough is questionable so that, well, we ought to question and doubt it.

  • @hamonur8351
    @hamonur8351 2 роки тому

    Everything is concious

  • @djrg7921
    @djrg7921 2 роки тому

    what if physical disability was chosen by the soul as a life lesson for the soul and retribution from past lives? Should we interfere? If we are ignorant of metaphysics and 'what really is going on' how can we make wise decisions?

  • @thejameskan
    @thejameskan 13 років тому +2

    some sweet info here

  • @HamzaDudgeonthelinguist
    @HamzaDudgeonthelinguist 14 років тому

    I agree 100% with everything she said here

  • @lucianoveneto5266
    @lucianoveneto5266 11 років тому +1

    Bravo, bravo.

  • @Michealkoshur
    @Michealkoshur 3 роки тому +1

    Anyone watching from Central University of Kashmir , Ganderbal India

  • @icl4ntic
    @icl4ntic 13 років тому

    I find the walk interesting. The pace seem brisk. Is it the speaker or the producer that dictated this speed? I feel like knowing that would add a lot to understanding how she is saying these things.

  • @Hume2012
    @Hume2012 12 років тому +2

    Really? Can you elaborate or give one example of that "mainstream"?

  • @jimcameron9848
    @jimcameron9848 Рік тому +2

    Today that park is littered with needles and bullet shells.

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @utubehayter OK see now we're getting somewhere. Unfortunately for you she never claimed that either Locke nor Hume said such a thing. She said, "this LEADS us too the ideal of the real man, which is something LIKE the person in the original position" I.E. a person without dependence, or knowledge of his place in society. She's talking about the stereotypical notion of man as an individualist.

  • @owosso2005
    @owosso2005 14 років тому

    @ThomasDeLello ummm... were you even listening? she is criticizing the social contract approach. she's aristotelian... social contract theory wasn't around for, you know, almost 2,000 years after aristotle.

  • @rickos1915
    @rickos1915 8 років тому +3

    Her thoughts make me realize that I am a perfect human being....lacking nothing.

  • @werockdahouse1027
    @werockdahouse1027 11 років тому +1

    Does anyone know the name of the song playing throughout the video?

    • @miseryandco2
      @miseryandco2 10 років тому +2

      I think the song is Dead and Lovely done by Tom Waits

  • @celestialteapot3310
    @celestialteapot3310 8 років тому +14

    Those who decry the "nanny state" are often those who actually had nannies. (kill the trumpet!)

    • @strelokoperator7509
      @strelokoperator7509 6 років тому +1

      Kill the state.

    • @quaesitor
      @quaesitor 6 років тому +1

      @@strelokoperator7509 why not heal it?

    • @buddy2000529
      @buddy2000529 6 років тому

      @@quaesitor If you're asking whether we should kill or heal the state, your asking what the state is at it core. I'd reckon that a good place to start would be with the state in its earliest forms. One place to look could be Mesopotamia, with the kingdom of Ur. Scholars like the political scientist James C. Scott have argued that the early state relied on the forced labor and migration of its subjects, and the continual enslavement of neighboring people. The accomplishments of early states like writing and monumental architecture were enjoyed mainly by the (small) administrative and ruling class, rather than by its subjects as a whole (Against the Grain). If you look at police brutality, mass incarceration, warfare, trade policies encouraging reliance on sweatshop labor, and the control of movement through national borders, it's pretty clear that this tendency of the state is still in place.
      Liberalism was supposed to fix this by spreading the benefits of the accomplishments of the state to everyone, but still, people are continuously excluded from those benefits. Even in Norway and Sweden, places liberalism's come close to covering every citizen, it still relies on systems which exclude people from the wealth of the state. For example, Sweden built part of its wealth on the sale of military hardware, notably, to the Nazis. Norway built its wealth on oil, the burning of which is denying wealth (and possibly even life) to future generations. Both those states rely on borders and citizenship papers to determine who's worthy of receiving the benefits of their welfare state.
      The state is, even at its best, a system which enriches the few through the immiseration of the many.

  • @Columbanus_S.X.
    @Columbanus_S.X. Рік тому

    what is BGM?

  • @MichaelRCarlson
    @MichaelRCarlson 13 років тому

    I think some people fail to point out the real problem so maybe I can help them along briefly and then you can reply if you choose. Some are skeptical of taxes and a strong federal government when that strength is misused. EG: spending untold sums of money on continual and arguably unjust wars against other countries for reasons other than self defense. Poverty and hunger are a cause of much more suffering and death than terrorism, yet gets much less funding. More...

  • @OppressedAnarchist
    @OppressedAnarchist 11 років тому +1

    If we take Judith Butler seriously then there shouldn't be any problems. According to Butler the individual just has to act differently because our social roles are only and act. If we act like an able bodied man then we won't have any problems.

  • @Taino137
    @Taino137 8 років тому +4

    I have examined life, and i've concluded, that it is not worth living. I would givie my eternal soul if a gasoline taker would explode next to me.

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому +1

    @utubehayter How do you view the "individualist" then? I think she's absolutely right that there is this ridiculous machismo going on where people (like you do) believe that individualism is the loner figure who has done everything by himself/herself, and has no obligations to society or people at large.

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому +1

    Why are you talking about trade? Nussbaum is not talking about trade, she's talking about the social contract theory, a theory which states that individuals choose to enter a society and give up some rights for the benefit of protection and safety. Can you please quote her actual words and then point out which part is a strawman because I'm really not feeling you on this one buddy

  • @doc2590
    @doc2590 3 роки тому +1

    I think Eckhart Tolle has a lot of the answers.

  • @Daemonocracy
    @Daemonocracy 13 років тому +1

    @shatakan Aren't alive? Aren't people? Not from my experience in sonography. That is most certainly sacred life, human life, vulnerable life. Hearing the fetal heartbeats, usually around 8 weeks, and seeing the moving 3 dimensional images with the latest ultrasound technology had completely changed my perspective that as fragile as an unborn child is, he she is most certainly human life.

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @utubehayter Society is not a "conceptual abstraction", it's a conglomeration of these very individuals you are talking about. Who's talking about collectivism? Locke is a social contractarian and Nussbaum agrees with him here so I don't know what you're talking about. She does however point out some of the inherent flaws with the social contract; just because there is a contract in place doesn't mean that the tenets of this contract is fair. This is not a straw man by any means.

  • @zetschka
    @zetschka 9 років тому +7

    @mieliav"I try to teach my child that respect must be earned."
    This could mean your children disrespecting everyone who has not 'earned' their respect!

    • @Avidcomp
      @Avidcomp 7 років тому +4

      No it doesn't. Respect is an evaluation with a positive conclusion. Disrespect is another conclusion.
      You've missed out the stage pre evaluating where one has yet to reach a conclusion. This is the default position.

    • @TheDionysianFields
      @TheDionysianFields 7 років тому +3

      I agree. The absence of respect doesn't mean disrespect or treating someone with a lack of basic dignity. Many social issues can arise from giving credit where it *isn't* due. The merit system is imperative.

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @utubehayter Cont. We don't owe each other something "undefined or unlimited". We do owe each other a helping hand - that's the very nature of society. Some people disagree whether we should help each other through taxation, but instead through private charity etc., and that's a legitimate concern. But I think at this juncture we have to have a strong federal government, and to sustain such a thing, we need to pay taxes. If you don't want to be swallowed up by China or Russia, you better pay up.

  • @myusername6595
    @myusername6595 7 років тому +15

    its amazing how intelligent I find her when she's talking about ancient Greece. but when she talks about contemporary politics its weak as hell.

    • @AjaxNixon
      @AjaxNixon 5 років тому

      I believe that is based on a bad sense of justice based on social contract. It's a departure from Aristotle

    • @philosophynerdlady
      @philosophynerdlady 5 років тому +1

      Could you please qualify your answer?

    • @NG-dc2pk
      @NG-dc2pk 9 місяців тому

      Was she a he, prior to being a she? I wonder

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @utubehayter Also, I'm so sick of American neo-cons misinterpreting John Locke's philosophy, he was by no means an "individualist", he worked in the Government for crying out loud, and was heavily involved in securing justice and fairness for all. Yes, he believed in personal liberty and the right to not be exploited by authority (he was living under a monarch, so who can blame him?), but he in no way supported an "individualist" approach. I haven't read enough Hume so I can't comment on him.

  • @garrywarne1
    @garrywarne1 12 років тому

    Sorry, thought he was talking about Rand!

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @utubehayter Please quote me ANY passage in ANY of Locke's work where he alludes to there not being such a thing called society. When you're arguing, everything is a "lingual term". Words by their very nature are lingual. Society is a choice human beings have made because living on your own in the wilderness is a pretty shitty deal, so we've gathered like a family (using Rousseau's metaphor) where we try to protect each other's rights through various institutions, like the police, firemen etc.

  • @sekamenacerecords1
    @sekamenacerecords1 11 років тому +1

    Why?

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @utubehayter What is she straw-manning? It isn't a debate and she isn't responding to any specific person, so who is she straw-manning? It's not an appeal to emotion fallacy, she simply states a plain fact, if you don't have handicap availability handicap people can't go there, that's not a fallacy.

  • @Shortm0vie
    @Shortm0vie 7 років тому

    Where is this video from?

    • @TheDionysianFields
      @TheDionysianFields 7 років тому +1

      A documentary called "Examined Life". But be warned, the rest of it is "root canal" bad. These are people who have examined everything but their own life, which was the point of Socrates' words.

  • @lipingrahman6648
    @lipingrahman6648 7 років тому

    In light of the findings in anthropology the ideas of the social contract, the loner, individualism, self reliability, planed societies, indeed centuries of thought on the left and right are all patiently false.

  • @Royalroadtotheunc
    @Royalroadtotheunc 14 років тому +1

    I agree with insomniabelow. That music sounds like some band in a park or in a parade. It spoils the video. Who in the world chose it?

  • @hasanunver2600
    @hasanunver2600 2 роки тому +1

    She's hella cute I guess I fell in love with her :D

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @utubehayter Yeah, I've watched the video and I can't see how it's a strawman. She talks about the theory of the social contract and the "state of nature" as specified by Rousseau and Locke, and expresses her concern about whether it's fair to assume that everyone would even be autonomous in the first place. How is this a straw man? You have to specify

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @S2Cents I don't even know what "conceptual abstraction" means in this context. All words are "conceptual abstractions" aren't they? That's what words are, symbols of a phenomena. He sounds like a pseudointellectual to me.

  • @sansorini2231
    @sansorini2231 4 роки тому

    she is so cool

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @S2Cents Yeah, I've encountered this bastardized notion of libertarianism on youtube before. I think Nozick and Milton Friedman are really important thinkers, and not to be dismissed, but people here have a very limited understanding of what libertarianism actually comprise. They spout catch-phrases like collectivism and liberty without any real grasp of these terms.

  • @alineharam
    @alineharam 12 років тому +2

    I'm sorry if there are still viewers who think Ayn Rand is in anyway a well read and legitimate thinker. She is, to be charitable, a person who reasons poorly and wildly.Nussbaum seems okay, I suppose

    • @TheDionysianFields
      @TheDionysianFields 7 років тому +4

      Rand's ideas are timeless. Nussbaum is merely rehashing basic liberal tenets.

  • @S2Cents
    @S2Cents 13 років тому

    @hampusheh below Margret Thatcher says:"Society is a conceptual abstraction". LOL.
    Yes and pretty damn fundamental and important one without which Ayn Rand "individuals" wouldn't exist.

  • @insomniabelow
    @insomniabelow 14 років тому +3

    This music is so unfitting...

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @utubehayter NOBODY is advocating collectivism or egalitarianism, for someone who talks about strawmen you sure like to use them yourself. I can definitely say that I'm envious of some people, so what? Is it fair that nature endows some people with talents and cripples others with mental or physical disability? I don't think it's right to just say "it's their own fault", or this person earned something, when so much is down to luck in the genetic or societal lottery.

    • @TheDionysianFields
      @TheDionysianFields 7 років тому

      We can't try to compensate for luck. I might have been taller but I'm not. My issue, my challenge.

  • @JustCamus
    @JustCamus 12 років тому

    Are you a libertarian?

  • @Dettaoner
    @Dettaoner 3 роки тому

    You better not change the lamp in a dark room , if you are able and learned how too ! Unless a redacted can as well .

  • @lunayuna4439
    @lunayuna4439 Місяць тому

    Why should we had music to a woman who is talking???? What a nuts society

  • @garrywarne1
    @garrywarne1 12 років тому

    The intellectual mainstream has always been against her, most of them agree that her arguments are laughable.

  • @hampusheh
    @hampusheh 13 років тому

    @utubehayter You don't have to be a collectivist to believe in fairness. You can still believe in personal liberty and worry about people around you, it's called compassion. It's not a straw man to argue from your own stand point, where did you get that from? No position was misrepresented here, she didn't say Locke or Hume believes in an individualistic man, she said that we see this idea of man as individualistic which is your position, so once again, WHAT'S THE STRAW MAN!?

  • @Sasquashist
    @Sasquashist 12 років тому +2

    Not here by choice

  • @bocchisprout
    @bocchisprout 4 роки тому +1

    Joe Mama

  • @kasperm.r.guldberg7354
    @kasperm.r.guldberg7354 6 років тому +1

    "Some ideas are so stupid that only intellectuals believe them." - Orwell
    It's just plain offensive to suppose that adult individuals need a bunch of careerist bureaucrats to administer nanny-ish (maternalistic) laws in order to correct and redeem them. How is this not gross interference with law-abiding citizens? The definition of an adult is (in my book, at least) someone who has internalised the functions of their mother and father and is thus self-reliant, well-regulated and (barring an emergency) capable of conducting themselves reasonably in society.
    No doubt Prof Nussbaum detests the idea of the "patriarchy" and its paternalistic arm. Why then does "matriarchy", maternalism and "nanny state" strike her as so appealing? Because - perhaps - she sees history as providing ample evidence that men are morally incomplete, child-like beings? To a feminist, any power which takes the form of a nanny must be preferable to sex-neutral government, I guess.

  • @arunjetli7909
    @arunjetli7909 7 років тому +6

    what a useless banter, nothing of substance Martha

  • @sexdrugsRnR
    @sexdrugsRnR 14 років тому

    the bullshit approach destroyed by hume

  • @mieliav
    @mieliav 11 років тому +1

    no, at "inherent dignity" as a human attribute, she lost me. what is inherent about it? I try to teach my child that respect must be earned.

    • @TheDionysianFields
      @TheDionysianFields 7 років тому +2

      I don't equate respect and dignity. Basic dignity should be shown to all but respect must be earned. Basically, don't harm people, add unnecessary stress to their lives or try to improve your situation at their expense. My version of expanded Libertarianism. At the society level, we should try to maintain an environment (particularly for children) that provides a standard of dignity.

    • @benniesngreen
      @benniesngreen 7 років тому

      Similar to how the founders talked about "natural rights"

  • @Daemonocracy
    @Daemonocracy 13 років тому +3

    So if she cares so much about the lives and happiness of the vulnerable in society, she must be pro-life when it comes to the unborn, correct?

  • @akwinata1
    @akwinata1 14 років тому

    I would like you are catholic and love Jesus. For you it would be to find Him and He would give you all.

  • @TeaParty1776
    @TeaParty1776 4 роки тому

    The Unexamined Life-Trump and Leftists.

  • @taygrande_tv
    @taygrande_tv 6 років тому

    no one cares about this, unless you're going to be a philosophy teacher... or are forced to take a philosophy class in college

    • @MichaelPolios
      @MichaelPolios 6 років тому

      Good people care about it...the rest will die unhappy.

  • @Avidcomp
    @Avidcomp 7 років тому +1

    Broken intellectual thinking. Morality cannot be a duty, it has to be the result of individual choice of action. Morality is objective by identifying life, human life qua life as the standard on which to base it.