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The Dishcast with Andrew Sullivan

Martha Nussbaum On Justice For Animals

The Dishcast with Andrew Sullivan

Andrew Sullivan

Politics, News, Religion & Spirituality

4.6 • 836 Ratings

🗓️ 13 October 2023

⏱️ 43 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit andrewsullivan.substack.com

Martha is a philosopher and legal thinker. She has taught at Harvard, Brown, Oxford and is currently the Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics at the University of Chicago, appointed in the Philosophy Department and the Law School. Her many books include The Fragility of Goodness, Sex and Social Justice, Creating Capabilities, and From Disgust to Humanity: Sexual Orientation and Constitutional Law. Her new book, which we discuss in this episode, is Justice for Animals.

You can listen to the episode right away in the audio player above (or on the right side of the player, click “Listen On” to add the Dishcast feed to your favorite podcast app). For two clips of our convo — on whether fish feel pain, and if we should sterilize city rats instead of killing them — pop over to our YouTube page.

Other topics: Martha growing up in NYC; converting to Judaism; studying Latin and Greek; becoming a professional actress; giving up meat; her late daughter’s profound influence on Justice For Animals; Aristotle’s views on justice; the difference between instinct and sentience; why crustaceans and insects probably don’t feel pain; preventing pain vs. stopping cruelty; Jeremy Bentham and Peter Singer; the matriarchal society of orcas; Martha and Amartya Sen’s creation of the “capability approach”; how zoos prevent pain but nevertheless limit life; how parrots are content living solo, even in a lab; why we shouldn’t rank animals according to intelligence; George Pitcher’s The Dogs Who Came to Stay; the various ways humans are inept compared to animals; how a dolphin can detect human pregnancy; how some animals have a precise sense of equality; the diffuse brain of the octopus; the emotional lives of elephants; our brutality toward pigs; why the intelligence of plants is merely “handwaving”; how humans are the only animals to show disgust with their own bodies; our sublimation of violent instincts; mammals and social learning; Matthew Scully’s Dominion and the “caring stewardship” of animals among Christians; whether humane meat on a mass scale is possible; the emergence of lab meat; Martha’s advice on what you can do to protect animals; JR Ackerley’s book My Dog Tulip; euthanasia; and various tales of Bowie, my beloved, late beagle.

The subject of animal rights was first tackled on the Dishcast with vegan activist John Oberg, and we posted a ton of your commentary here. Browse the Dishcast archive for another convo you might enjoy (the first 102 episodes are free in their entirety — subscribe to get everything else). Coming up soon: Spencer Klavan on How to Save the West: Ancient Wisdom for 5 Modern Crises and Matthew Crawford, author of Shop Class as Soulcraft. Later on, two NYT columnists — David Brooks and Pamela Paul — and the authors of Where Have All the Democrats Gone?, John Judis and Ruy Teixeira.

Have a question you want me to ask one of these future guests? Email [email protected], and please put the question in the subject line. Please send any guest recs, pod dissent and other comments to [email protected].

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

The Hi there and welcome to another dishcast.

0:31.6

I'm still in Provincetown because I can't leave because it's so beautiful and the autumn here is sublime. And I just want to

0:40.8

thank you all for your continued listening, give you a little heads up about what's coming.

0:46.9

Spencer Claven's rather young, interesting reactionary has written a book called How to Save the

0:52.8

West. We get into it. Matthew Corford,

0:55.8

the author of Shop Class as Soulcraft, another really interesting character, is coming on.

1:03.1

David Brooks, who doesn't need any real introduction. Pamela Paul is coming on, too, to talk,

1:08.6

books, wokeness, all the rest of it. But today, we're returning to a topic

1:14.2

the dishes sort of engaged with periodically, which I'm trying to figure out a way to engage more

1:21.0

rigorously, and that is the welfare rights, dignity of animals. And it's a huge topic. And it's one that's always

1:32.8

kind of puzzled me and prompted huge amounts of guilt in me into how I am complicit in

1:41.7

some way in, and we all are to some extent, in suffering of so many,

1:47.0

of what I believe are God's creatures.

1:49.3

And anyway, so it was, it was really, I was really excited to see that one of my favorite writers and philosophers has really gone to town on this.

1:57.7

Martha Nussbaum is a philosopher and legal thinker.

2:02.1

She's taught at Harvard, Brown, Oxford, all those small podug places, and is currently

2:09.8

the Ernst Freud Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics at the University of Chicago

2:15.6

appointed in the philosophy department and the law school.

2:20.2

Her many books include The Fragility of Goodness, Sex and Social Justice, Creating Capabilities

2:27.8

and From Discuss to Humanity, Sexual Orientation, and Constitutional Law.

2:33.5

And I was happy, proud to publish Martha back in the days

2:39.2

when I was editing the Republic. And we were in the vanguard of expanding rights and dignity for gay

...

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