Not for Profit Quotes by Martha C. Nussbaum

Not for Profit Quotes

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Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities by Martha C. Nussbaum
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“Knowledge is no guarantee of good behavior, but ignorance is a virtual guarantee of bad behavior.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Another problem with people who fail to examine themselves is that they often prove all too easily influenced.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Play teaches people to be capable of living with others without control; it connects the experiences of vulnerability and surprise to curiosity and wonder, rather than to crippling anxiety. How”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“This tradition argues that education is not just about the passive assimilation of facts and cultural traditions, but about challenging the mind to become active, competent, and thoughtfully critical in a complex world. This model of education supplanted an older one in which children sat still at desks all day and simply absorbed, and then regurgitated, the material that was brought their way.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“The presence of the other, which can be very threatening, becomes, in play, a delightful source of curiosity, and this curiosity contributes toward the development of healthy attitudes in friendship, love, and, later, political life. Winnicott”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“la educación debería proporcionarnos los elementos necesarios para desenvolvernos de manera eficaz en ese diálogo multinacional, como “ciudadanos del mundo”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Sin fines de lucro: Por qué la democracia necesita de las humanidades
“What makes majorities try, so ubiquitously, to denigrate or stigmatize minorities? Whatever these forces are, it is ultimately against them that true education for responsible national and global citizenship must fight. And it must fight using whatever resources the human personality contains that help democracy prevail against hierarchy.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Such myths of purity, however, are misleading and pernicious.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Thirsty for national profit, nations, and their systems of education, are heedlessly discarding skills that are needed to keep democracies alive. If this trend continues, nations all over the world will soon be producing generations of useful machines, rather than complete citizens who can think for themselves, criticize tradition, and understand the significance of another person’s sufferings and achievements.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Thinking falsely that our own society is pure within can only breed aggression toward outsiders and blindness about aggression toward insiders.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“When we meet in society, if we have not learned to see both self and other in that way, imagining in one another inner faculties of thought and emotion, democracy is bound to fail, because democracy is built upon respect and concern, and these in turn are built upon the ability to see other people as human beings, not simply as objects.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“the political struggle for freedom and equality must first of all be a struggle within each person, as compassion and respect contend against fear, greed, and narcissistic aggression.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“To think about education for democratic citizenship, we have to think about what democratic nations are, and what they strive for.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“This tradition argues that education is not just about the passive assimilation of facts and cultural traditions, but about challenging the mind to become active, competent, and thoughtfully critical in a complex world.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“What about the arts and literature, so often valued by democratic educators? An education for economic growth will, first of all, have contempt for these parts of a child’s training, because they don’t look like they lead to personal or national economic advancement. For this reason, all over the world, programs in arts and the humanities, at all levels, are being cut away, in favor of the cultivation of the technical.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“The ability to detect fallacy is one of the things that makes democratic life decent.”
Martha Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“The ability to think well about political issues affecting the nation, to examine, reflect, argue, and debate, deferring to neither tradition nor authority •  The ability to recognize fellow citizens as people with equal rights, even though they may be different in race, religion, gender, and sexuality: to look at them with respect, as ends, not just as tools to be manipulated for one’s own profit •  The ability to have concern for the lives of others, to grasp what policies of many types mean for the opportunities and experiences of one’s fellow citizens, of many types, and for people outside one’s own nation •  The ability to imagine well a variety of complex issues affecting the story of a human life as it unfolds: to think about childhood, adolescence, family relationships, illness, death, and much more in a way informed by an understanding of a wide range of human stories, not just by aggregate data •  The ability to judge political leaders critically, but with an informed and realistic sense of the possibilities available to them •  The ability to think about the good of the nation as a whole, not just that of one’s own local group •  The ability to see one’s own nation, in turn, as a part of a complicated world order in which issues of many kinds require intelligent transnational deliberation for their resolution This is only a sketch, but it is at least a beginning in articulating what we need.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Meanwhile, children learn from the adult societies around them, which typically direct this “projective disgust” onto one or more concrete subordinate groups—African Americans, Jews, women, homosexuals, poor people, lower castes in the Indian caste hierarchy.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Disgust soon begins to do real damage, however, in connection with the basic narcissism of human children. One effective way to distance oneself thoroughly from one’s own animality is to project the properties of animality—bad smell, ooziness, sliminess—onto some group of people, and then to treat those people as contaminating or defiling, turning them into an underclass, and, in effect, a boundary, or a buffer zone, between the anxious person and the feared and stigmatized properties of animality.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“A central part of disgust’s pathology, we said, is the bifurcation of the world into the “pure” and the “impure”—the construction of a “we” who are without flaw and a “they” who are dirty, evil, and contaminating. Much bad thinking about international politics shows the traces of this pathology, as people prove all too ready to think about some group of others as black and sullied, while they themselves are on the side of the angels. We now notice that this very deep-seated human tendency is nourished by many time-honored modes of storytelling to children, which suggest that the world will be set right when some ugly and disgusting witch or monster is killed, or even cooked in her own oven.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Not For Profit focuses on citizenship. I argue that the humanities and arts provide skills that are essential to keep democracy healthy.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Critical thinking builds corporate cultures of accountability in which critical voices are not silenced. And a trained imagination is essential for innovation, a key to any healthy economy: no nation can thrive on the basis of yesterday’s skills learned by rote.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Striking confirmation of Rubenstein’s argument comes from the fact that Singapore and China, two nations that, to say the least, do not aim at the cultivation of critical and independent democratic citizenship, have recently conducted education reforms that foreground the arts and humanities, explicitly in order to encourage innovation and solid corporate cultures. Of course they then must contain those disciplines, preventing them from spilling over into a demand for open political debate, and this they aggressively do.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“The battle for responsible democracy and alert citizenship is always difficult and uncertain. But it is both urgent and winnable, and the humanities are a large part of winning it.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Незабаром всі країни світу почнуть виготовляти покоління корисних машин, а не повноцінних громадян, що здатні самостійно мислити, критикувати традиційний уклад та розуміти значення страждань і досягнень інших людей.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities
“Перерахую здібності, що пов'язані з гуманітарними науками та мистецтвом: здатність до критичного мислення; здатність відірватися від приватних інтересів і поглянути на світові проблеми з точки зору "громадянина світу"; і, нарешті, здатність співчутливо ставитися до труднощів іншої людини.”
Martha C. Nussbaum, Not for Profit: Why Democracy Needs the Humanities