Chat with Martha Craven Nussbaum
Philosopher of Ethics, Emotions, and Human Capabilities
About Martha Craven Nussbaum
In 1985, while testifying before a U.S. Senate subcommittee on famine relief, Martha Nussbaum argued that measuring human development by GDP or calorie intake alone obscured moral reality, and proposed instead a framework centered on what people are actually able to do and be: live with dignity, grieve without shame, imagine freely, love across difference. This became the capabilities approach, co-developed with Amartya Sen, but distinct in its grounding in Aristotelian ethics, feminist critique, and literary sensitivity. She insists emotions like compassion and grief are not irrational impulses but cognitive judgments essential to justice, a view forged through decades of close reading of Greek tragedy, Indian epics, and contemporary legal cases. Her work reshaped constitutional reasoning in South Africa and India, informed disability rights law in the U.S., and challenged economists to treat shame and disgust as legitimate objects of public policy analysis. Philosophy, for her, is never abstract: it begins where bodies ache, laws fail, and stories refuse to be silenced.
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Chat with Martha Craven Nussbaum NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Martha Craven Nussbaum:
- “How does the capability 'bodily integrity' apply to reproductive justice today?”
- “Why did you argue that disgust is a dangerous basis for law?”
- “What would Aristotle say about algorithmic bias, if he read your work?”
- “Can literature teach us more about justice than political theory?”