Martha Craven Nussbaum is an American philosopher. She is one of the most influential and widely read philosophers of the past fifty years. She was born on 6 May 1947 in New York City. Her family was wealthy and Protestant, with roots in the American South. She later said her comfortable childhood made her acutely aware of inequality and the contingencies of privilege. She converted to Judaism in 1969. She studied classics at New York University and earned her PhD from Harvard in 1975. Her doctoral work was on ancient Greek philosophy, especially Aristotle. Classical scholarship has remained central to her work throughout her career. She has taught at Harvard, Brown, and, since 1995, at the University of Chicago, where she holds a joint appointment in the Law School and the Philosophy Department. She has written more than thirty books and hundreds of articles. Her major works include The Fragility of Goodness (1986) on ancient Greek ethics, Women and Human Development (2000) on her capabilities approach, Upheavals of Thought (2001) on emotions, and Political Emotions (2013) on how societies cultivate good feelings. She has worked with the economist Amartya Sen on the capabilities approach to human development, which has influenced the United Nations Human Development Index. She has been a public intellectual throughout her career. She has written on women's rights, LGBT equality, disability, animal welfare, and the role of emotions in law and politics. She has received many honours, including the Kyoto Prize and the Berggruen Prize. She is still active, writing and teaching in 2026.
Nussbaum matters for three reasons. First, she has developed one of the most influential approaches to ethics and justice of our time: the capabilities approach. Working with the Indian economist Amartya Sen, she has argued that societies should be judged by what their members are actually able to do and be. A good society is not just one with high income. It is one where people have real opportunities to be healthy, educated, connected to others, and able to shape their own lives. This approach has influenced the United Nations' Human Development Index, disability policy, and debates about global poverty.
Second, she has brought emotions back into philosophical ethics. Much of modern moral philosophy, following Kant, treated emotions as obstacles to clear moral thinking. Nussbaum argued the opposite. Emotions like compassion, grief, fear, and love contain important information about what matters in human life. Ignoring them produces bad ethics. She has written major works on how emotions work, how they can be educated, and how societies can cultivate the right kinds of feeling. This turn has reshaped whole areas of moral philosophy.
Third, she writes for the public. Many of her books are aimed at educated general readers, not only specialists. She has argued passionately for the humanities as essential to democracy. Her book Not for Profit (2010) defends the study of literature, philosophy, and the arts as training in the imagination that democratic citizens need. Her example, of a philosopher who combines serious scholarship, public engagement, and defence of the humanities, is a model for engaged academic life today.
For a first introduction, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities (2010) is short and accessible. It gives a strong sense of Nussbaum's voice and concerns. Her Creating Capabilities: The Human Development Approach (2011) is a clear introduction to the capabilities approach. Many interviews with Nussbaum are available online, including discussions on the BBC, NPR, and Philosophy Bites. The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entries on her work are reliable and well-written.
For deeper reading, Women and Human Development (2000) is a key work for the capabilities approach. Upheavals of Thought (2001) is her major book on emotions, long but rewarding. Hiding from Humanity (2004) is very readable and politically relevant. Political Emotions (2013) extends the emotions work to liberal democracy. For secondary literature, Barbara Arneil's Sen and Nussbaum on Justice compares the two major versions of the capabilities approach. Daniel Callcut's edited Reading Bernard Williams includes essays that engage with Nussbaum's ethical thinking.
Nussbaum's capabilities list is a Western imposition on other cultures.
She takes this challenge seriously and has responded to it at length. She argues that the capabilities on her list are genuinely universal, though how they are achieved will vary across cultures. She has developed the capabilities approach partly through fieldwork with women's groups in India, working closely with Indian feminists. Her collaborators include non-Western thinkers like Amartya Sen. The charge of Western imposition deserves serious engagement, but treating it as a knock-down objection misses the careful way Nussbaum has built her position through cross-cultural dialogue.
Nussbaum is a 'feelings-based' philosopher who abandons rigorous argument.
Her work on emotions is philosophically rigorous. She draws on ancient and modern cognitive science to argue that emotions are evaluations of things that matter to us. This is a technical philosophical claim with careful supporting arguments. She does not celebrate unexamined feelings. She argues emotions can be educated, refined, and sometimes rejected. Calling her a 'feelings philosopher' as if she abandons reason misreads her whole project. She is trying to understand how reason and emotion actually work together, not to replace one with the other.
The capabilities approach is the same as human rights theory.
The two overlap but are not identical. Human rights are usually framed as rights against something (torture, detention, discrimination). Capabilities are framed as what people should be able to do and be. A right not to be tortured is roughly equivalent to a capability for bodily integrity. But the capabilities approach pushes further, asking about substantive opportunities rather than just legal protections. A country can have legal rights for women without having a real capability for bodily integrity if women cannot safely move around. Nussbaum sees capabilities as underpinning rights, not replacing them.
Nussbaum's criticism of Judith Butler shows she opposes queer theory or feminism.
Her 1999 critique of Butler was specific: she argued Butler's difficult style was politically evasive. She did not reject feminism or queer theory. Nussbaum has written extensively on women's rights, LGBT equality, and the capabilities of people who do not fit traditional categories. She was an early and consistent defender of gay marriage. Her disagreement with Butler is a disagreement among feminist thinkers, not a rejection of feminism. Students should read both sides of the argument to see that serious disagreement is how philosophy makes progress.
For research-level engagement, The Fragility of Goodness (1986) is her major scholarly work in ancient philosophy. Frontiers of Justice (2006) extends Rawlsian political philosophy to disability, animals, and global justice. The Monarchy of Fear (2018) applies her framework to contemporary politics. For critical engagement, see the Nussbaum volume in the Library of Living Philosophers series, where major thinkers critique her work and she responds. Justice for Animals (2022) is her most recent major book. Martha Nussbaum's collected essays in Philosophical Interventions gather shorter pieces for serious readers.
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