Monday, June 8, 2026

Care Is Not the Opposite of Dignity

 

Care Is Not the Opposite of Dignity

When Dependence Is Not a Deficiency, but a Fundamental Condition of Human Life

We live in a culture that admires independence.

The adult person is expected to stand on their own feet, manage their own life, take responsibility for their choices, and depend as little as possible on others. The person who manages alone is often met with respect. The person who needs help may more easily be met with pity, unease, or a quiet form of ranking.

Independence has become more than a practical ability.

It has become a moral ideal.

This can be heard in our language. We say that a person is “managing” when they no longer need help. We describe someone as a “burden” when their need for care becomes extensive. We associate dignity with control over the body, the ability to work, financial independence, and the capacity to make decisions without support.

Dependence may then easily appear to be the opposite of dignity.

Martha Nussbaum challenges this assumption.


She argues that vulnerability, bodily needs, and dependence on care are not unfortunate deviations from real human life. They are part of human life itself. We are not first independent beings who occasionally become dependent. From the beginning and throughout life, we are woven into relationships, institutions, and forms of care that we cannot create alone.

This changes the question.

Instead of asking how human beings can free themselves from all dependence, we must ask how relationships of dependence can be shaped in ways that protect freedom, integrity, and dignity.

Care is not the opposite of dignity.

But care can be given in ways that either strengthen or violate it.

The Myth of the Independent Human Being

The modern Western individual is often portrayed as self-sufficient. This person owns themselves, thinks through their own reason, and enters relationships by free choice. They are capable of formulating their interests, negotiating with others, and taking responsibility for the consequences of their decisions.

This human being occupies a central place in many theories of politics and justice.

Within the social contract tradition, society is often understood as something free and roughly equal individuals agree to establish. They surrender some freedom in order to gain security, order, and mutual advantage.

But this picture captures only part of human life.

The infant cannot enter into a contract. It cannot survive without extensive care. The older person who has lost memory or mobility may depend on others in every small part of the day. The seriously ill person may not always be able to protect their own interests. The person with extensive cognitive disabilities may need support in order to understand, choose, and communicate.

Are these people less human because they do not fit the ideal of the independent citizen?

Nussbaum’s answer is no.

The problem does not lie in the people.

The problem lies in the theory.

A theory of justice that fits only the strong, healthy, and self-sufficient does not describe human beings as they actually are. It describes an idealised fragment of human life and turns that fragment into the norm for everyone.

But we are not self-sufficient beings.

None of us has given ourselves life. No one has learned language alone. No one has developed an identity without the gaze, touch, and response of others. Even the most successful and independent citizen depends on food produced by others, infrastructures maintained by others, institutions sustained by others, and relationships that give life meaning.

Independence is therefore never absolute.

It is always supported.

We Begin Life in the Hands of Others

Human life begins in radical dependence.

A child cannot protect itself from cold, obtain food, or understand its own needs. It is entirely dependent on the attention of others. It must be lifted before it can stand. It must be met before it can develop a self.

Care comes before autonomy.

This is not only a biological fact. It is also a philosophical insight.

The human being who later says “I” has come into being through a “you.” The person has learned to understand themselves because someone first understood them. They have developed trust in the world because someone responded to crying, fear, and need.

Independence therefore grows out of dependence.

It does not stand in opposition to it.

The same is true later in life. When we become ill, lose someone, or experience crisis, we may once again need others to carry parts of life for us. This may involve practical assistance, but also something more: another person’s calm, language, or presence.

A person who needs support does not necessarily return to an inferior condition.

They simply reveal that life has always been relational.

The Shame of Dependence

Even so, many people experience shame when they need help.

Shame may arise when the body no longer obeys, when one must ask for assistance with something previously done alone, or when one feels that others must spend time and resources on one’s life.

The older person may apologise for being a nuisance.

The sick person may feel guilty because the family must change its plans.

The person who needs extensive services may learn to make their needs small and modest so as not to ask for too much.

This shame does not come only from within.

It is shaped by society’s ideals.

When self-sufficiency becomes the measure of adulthood, receiving help may feel like a loss of status. When productivity becomes the measure of value, the person who cannot work may begin to doubt their place. When care is described as a cost, the person may begin to identify with that cost.

The question then becomes not only: What do I need?

It becomes: Do I have the right to need this?

A just society must be able to answer clearly:

Yes.

The need for care does not make a person less worthy.

It makes care more binding.

Dignity That Does Not Have to Be Earned

Dignity is one of the most frequently used words in ethics, healthcare, and social work. At the same time, it is a word that easily becomes unclear.

What does it mean to say that all human beings possess dignity?

If dignity depends on intelligence, self-control, morality, the ability to work, or social usefulness, then it is no longer unconditional. It can rise and fall according to how well a person functions.

Nussbaum’s thinking rests on the idea that dignity belongs to human life itself.

It does not have to be earned.

This does not mean that every action is dignified, or that human beings cannot violate others. It means that a person can never be reduced to their function, diagnosis, performance, or cost.

A person who cannot express themselves in words does not possess less dignity.

A person who needs help throughout everyday life does not possess less dignity.

A person who cannot repay care does not possess less dignity.

The task of care is therefore not to bestow dignity on someone who lacks it.

The task of care is to meet the dignity that is already there.

The Body Reveals Our Vulnerability

We live through the body.

The body is not merely something we have. It is the way we are present in the world. Through the body we sense, move, work, love, and encounter others.

But the body is also vulnerable.

It may be injured, become ill, or grow exhausted. It may lose functions. It may require assistance with the most intimate activities.

This challenges the idea that dignity is primarily linked to control.

A person who no longer controls bladder, movement, or speech does not lose their humanity. But they become more dependent on how others relate to the body.

Care for the body is therefore always ethically charged.

The person who helps another with washing, dressing, using the toilet, or receiving medical treatment comes very close to the other’s vulnerability. The task may be carried out technically correctly and still be experienced as violating. It may also be carried out with an attentiveness that protects integrity.

The difference may lie in small actions.

Whether someone knocks on the door.

Whether they explain what is about to happen.

Whether the body is covered.

Whether the person is allowed the time they need.

Whether permission is asked before touching.

Dignity often appears in the pace at which care is given.

When the Body Becomes a Task

Professional services must necessarily organise work. Tasks must be distributed, documented, and completed. This is necessary for quality and safety.

But organisation can also cause the human being to disappear behind the task.

The employee is expected to “do the morning care,” “administer medication,” or “assist with the meal.” The language is practical, but it can create distance. The body becomes something upon which work is performed.

The danger increases when time pressure grows.

Efficiency may then come into conflict with the person’s rhythm. The employee knows what must happen, while the person receiving assistance has not yet had time to understand or consent. The body is moved, washed, or dressed before the person has fully entered the situation.

Care can then become a form of takeover.

Not necessarily because the helper wishes to dominate, but because the system’s time moves faster than the other person’s time.

Just care must therefore ask a difficult question:

Whose pace governs the situation?

Dependence and Power

Dependence creates power.

The person who needs something controlled by another is in a vulnerable position. This is true within families, medicine, social work, and care services.

The professional possesses knowledge, access, keys, time, and institutional authority. The person receiving the service may depend on all of this.

This asymmetry does not disappear because the relationship is warm and caring.

On the contrary, power may become harder to see when intentions are good.

The employee may sincerely want what is best for the person. But who defines what “best” means? Who decides which risks are acceptable? Who determines when care is provided and in what manner?

Care can protect a person from danger.

But it can also protect the organisation from uncertainty.

What is described as safety may sometimes be control. What is called structure may become overrule. What is named care may be an arrangement that primarily makes working life easier.

Care must therefore always be accompanied by a critique of power.

“For Your Own Good”

The sentence “we are doing this for your own good” expresses something fundamental about care.

Sometimes the helper knows more about the risk than the person does. A child must be protected from danger. A person experiencing psychosis may need help to avoid serious harm. A person with cognitive difficulties may need support in understanding consequences.

It would be irresponsible to pretend that every decision can always be left entirely to the individual.

But the sentence is dangerous.

It can end the conversation. It can make the helper’s interpretation immune to challenge. It can conceal the fact that care also serves other interests.

Nussbaum accepts that a limited form of paternalism may sometimes be necessary. Yet her theory also points towards a crucial demand: the person who needs protection must still be met as someone with wishes, emotions, and possibilities of their own.

Protection must not become another word for obedience.

The task of care is not to take over life, but to support the person in living it.

Relational Freedom

Freedom is often understood as freedom from interference.

I am free when others leave me alone. This is an important aspect of freedom. Human beings need protection from coercion, control, and abuse.

But for people who need care, freedom also depends on assistance.

A wheelchair user may need support in order to leave home. A person with impaired vision may need accessible information. A person with cognitive difficulties may need help in understanding a choice. A sick person may need treatment in order to participate in life.

Freedom then does not arise in the absence of relationship.

It arises through relationship.

This may be called relational freedom. A person is not free because they need no one, but because support is organised in a way that allows them to act, choose, and participate.

The good helper does not always do less.

But the help makes the other person’s life larger.

Receiving Help Without Losing Oneself

There is an important difference between receiving help and being taken over.

Help may support a person’s own action. It may make it possible for them to remain the author of what they do. But help may also replace the person.

The employee may choose the clothes, decide the meal, plan the day, and answer in conversation. Everything may happen efficiently and with good intentions. Yet the person may gradually become a spectator in their own life.

This is a particular danger when assistance is given over a long period.

If others always do things faster, more correctly, or more safely, the person may lose the experience of being able to influence events.

Care that protects dignity must therefore remain attentive to the remnants of action.

What can the person do themselves?

What can be done together?

Where can the helper wait?

This is not about demanding performance. A person should not have to demonstrate independence in order to deserve respect.

It is about protecting the acting subject that remains present even within dependence.

Care as Recognition

Care is more than the completion of tasks.

It can also be recognition.

To recognise a person is to meet them as someone, not merely as something. It is to see that the other person’s experience matters, even when it is expressed differently from our own.

A person may have difficulty explaining why they become distressed. The professional can choose to treat the distress as behaviour to be regulated. But she can also ask what the distress is communicating.

Perhaps there are too many people in the room. Perhaps a familiar person has disappeared. Perhaps events are moving too quickly. Perhaps the body is in pain.

Recognising care tries to understand the expression before correcting it.

It does not ask only: How can we make this stop?

It asks: What is this person trying to say?

The Professional Relationship

Professional care differs from care between family members and friends.

It is connected to an occupation, a mandate, and an organisation. It should be professionally and ethically justifiable. It should be dependable even when personal sympathy is absent.

This is a strength.

A person should not have to be liked in order to receive good care.

But professionalisation also carries a risk. Care can become so regulated that the relationship loses human presence. The employee may perform the task correctly without truly meeting the person.

The question of professional distance therefore matters.

Distance can protect both parties. But distance must not become coldness. A good professional relationship requires both boundaries and engagement.

Care is not only doing something for a person.

It is also being present with them.

The Importance of Continuity

People who receive extensive services often meet many helpers.

Shifts change. Employees leave. Services are outsourced or reorganised. From the organisation’s perspective, such changes may be necessary.

For the person, they may be repeated relational ruptures.

The new helper does not know the body’s signals, the habits, the fears, or the humour. Everything must be learned again. The person must once again entrust their vulnerability to a stranger.

Continuity is therefore not merely an administrative advantage.

It is part of the quality of care.

Nussbaum places emotions and affiliation among the basic human capabilities. This means that relational stability concerns more than well-being. It has significance for justice.

A person should be able to form attachments without organisational arrangements repeatedly tearing them away.

The Emotional Life of Care

Care is often described as work, service, or resource. But care also has emotional content.

The person who needs help may experience gratitude, shame, anger, grief, or fear. The person providing help may experience warmth, helplessness, irritation, and responsibility.

These emotions do not disappear because the relationship is professional.

They must be understood.

A recipient of care may become angry with the person on whom they are most dependent. This may be difficult for the helper. But anger may also be an expression of dignity: resistance to losing control.

The employee may feel inadequate when needs exceed available resources. She may develop protective distance or begin to view the person as demanding.

Ethical practice requires space for reflection on such feelings. Otherwise, they may express themselves through language, routines, and decisions without anyone acknowledging them.

Care and Reciprocity

We often imagine care as moving in one direction.

One person gives, and one person receives.

But human relationships are rarely so simple.

The person receiving care may offer trust, closeness, humour, and experience. Someone who needs extensive help may still have great significance in the lives of others.

This does not mean that the recipient of care should be required to repay the help. Dignity cannot depend on what the person gives in return.

But it reminds us that the person who needs care is neither empty nor passive.

The relationship may be asymmetrical without being one-sided.

Care can create an encounter in which both are changed.

Family Care

A great deal of care is provided by families.

Parents support children with extensive needs throughout life. Spouses care for one another through illness. Adult children help ageing parents.

This care may arise from love and loyalty. But it may also become overwhelming.

A society that romanticises family care may conceal the burden. It may expect families to take responsibility without sufficient support and thereby privatise care in a way that creates new injustice.

Nussbaum’s perspective implies that care is a public responsibility.

Not because the family is unimportant, but because basic human capabilities should not depend on how resourceful or enduring a family happens to be.

The person who needs care has rights.

The person providing care also has a life.

Justice must protect both.

Gender and Invisible Care

Care work has historically been carried out largely by women.

Much of this work has been unpaid or poorly paid. It has been understood as a natural extension of femininity, love, and family responsibility.

Society has therefore been able to benefit from care without fully valuing it.

If care is a basic condition of human life, it must also be treated as a central social task.

That means decent working conditions, time, competence, and political priority.

A society that praises care in ceremonial speeches but organises it under time pressure and with low status expresses a profound contradiction.

The value of care must be visible in the way care work itself is valued.

When the Market Meets Care

In modern welfare services, care is sometimes organised through competition, measurement, and tendering.

Such arrangements may aim at efficiency and quality. But care cannot be fully understood as a standardised commodity.

Care often depends on familiarity, continuity, and trust. These take time to develop and cannot simply be transferred from one provider to another.

When service providers are replaced, the system may regard the service as unchanged. But for the person, it is not necessarily the same.

The people are different.

The relationship is different.

A just care system must therefore consider more than price and measurable outputs. It must ask what the organisation does to the person’s attachments, security, and possibility of participation.

What is economically replaceable may be humanly irreplaceable.

Old Age and the Loss of Control

Old age makes dependence visible.

The body slows down. The senses weaken. What was once simple may require help. Some people lose language, memory, or orientation.

In a culture that idealises youth, speed, and independence, old age may appear as a loss of value.

But dignity does not follow the level of functioning.

The older person remains someone with a history, relationships, and a distinctive way of being in the world. Even when words disappear, expressions, rhythms, and recognition remain.

Care in old age therefore requires more than keeping the body alive.

It must protect the person’s lifeworld.

What music does he recognise?

What makes her feel safe?

Which routines carry memory?

When care knows the history, it does not meet only a body in need of assistance.

It meets a life that has been lived.

Illness and Dignity

Illness can make a person feel alien to themselves.

The body that was once silent and dependable suddenly becomes demanding. One must ask for help, wait for answers, and allow others to examine what is private.

This may feel like a loss of dignity.

But it is important to distinguish between losing control and losing dignity.

Control may diminish.

Dignity remains.

What becomes decisive is how the person is met. Are they given information? Is their fear taken seriously? Is the body treated with respect? Are they allowed to participate in decisions as far as possible?

Care cannot always restore health.

But it can protect the person from disappearing behind the illness.

Disability and Dependence

People with disabilities are often understood through their need for assistance.

This can conceal everything else: interests, relationships, humour, resistance, and life projects.

At the same time, the need itself should not be denied.

An inclusive philosophy must be able to hold two thoughts together: disability is not the whole person, but it may create real needs for support.

Nussbaum does precisely this. She does not romanticise dependence, but she refuses to make it a sign of lesser human worth.

The question is therefore not how the person can be made as similar as possible to the independent norm.

The question is how support can provide access to life, affiliation, play, integrity, and influence.

The Ambivalence of Care

Care is never simply good.

It has a double character.

It can protect and restrict.

It can liberate and control.

It can strengthen a voice or speak over it.

That is precisely why care needs ethics.

Good intentions are not enough. The helper must be willing to ask how care is experienced from the other person’s perspective.

Am I supporting, or taking over?

Am I protecting the person, or protecting the system’s order?

Am I listening to resistance, or merely interpreting it as a problem?

Ethical care is not flawless.

But it is self-critical.

When There Is No Simple Solution

The dilemmas of care cannot always be resolved.

A person may want something that involves serious risk. The family may believe one thing, the professional another, and the person themselves a third. Resources may be insufficient.

There is not always one action that protects every value at once.

But there are better and worse ways of meeting the dilemma.

A better practice makes the conflict visible. It listens to the person, examines alternatives, and explains the decision. It acknowledges the loss that may occur.

A worse practice hides power behind routines and the language of necessity.

Just care does not mean that every wish is fulfilled.

But no one should be reduced to an object of other people’s decisions.

The Measure of a Good Society

How do we judge whether a society is good?

We may measure economic growth, productivity, and efficiency. But Nussbaum invites us to ask something else:

How do those who need the greatest support live?

Are they able to retain integrity?

Do they have the opportunity for affiliation?

Are their feelings and wishes taken seriously?

Can they influence their own everyday life?

A society reveals its view of humanity through the way it organises dependence.

If the person who needs care is treated as a burden, a narrow human ideal is exposed.

If care is provided in ways that allow the person to live with freedom, belonging, and self-respect, justice becomes concrete.

Care as Human Community

Care reminds us that human life is not merely an individual project.

We come into being through others.

We are carried when we cannot carry ourselves.

This happens at the beginning of life, in illness, in crisis, and often in old age.

No one can guarantee that they will never need extensive support.

The person we describe as dependent is therefore not a strange exception.

They reveal our own possible future and our already existing vulnerability.

Care binds the phases of life together. It reminds the strong that strength is not permanent, and it reminds the person who needs help that need does not make them less human.

Dignity in Dependence

Care is not the opposite of dignity.

The opposite of dignity is being treated as though one’s life, body, and voice do not matter.

A person may be entirely dependent on others and still be met with respect, freedom, and recognition. Another may be physically self-sufficient yet live within relationships that violate and control.

Dependence does not determine dignity.

The way dependence is organised makes a difference.

Just care protects the right to remain a subject even when one needs assistance. It allows the person to remain the author of their life as far as possible. It provides support without making the person invisible.

The Fundamental Human Condition

Nussbaum’s philosophy shows us that dependence is not a defect in the human being.

It is a fundamental condition.

We are embodied, vulnerable, and relational beings. We need others in order to survive, develop, and find meaning.

Independence has value. Human beings should be able to direct their own lives and be protected from unnecessary control. But independence must be understood within the community that makes it possible.

Perhaps the deepest form of freedom is not being able to manage everything alone.

It is being able to receive help without losing oneself.

A just society is therefore not a society in which no one is dependent.

It is a society in which dependence does not lead to shame, exclusion, or loss of rights.

Where care does not reduce the person to a need.

Where the person who needs help is still seen as a citizen, a fellow human being, and a whole life.

Care is not the defeat of dignity.

It is one of the ways human dignity is carried.


We are embodied, vulnerable, and relational beings. 
We need others in order to survive, develop, and find meaning.


This essay is written from my many lectures on this subject for students in Social Work. The text is developed in a conversation with Open AI/ChatGPT, which also made the illustation.

Omsorg er ikke det motsatte av verdighet

 

Omsorg er ikke det motsatte av verdighet

Når avhengighet ikke er en mangel, men et menneskelig grunnvilkår

Vi lever i en kultur som beundrer selvstendighet.

Det voksne mennesket skal stå på egne ben, mestre sitt liv, ta ansvar for sine valg og være minst mulig avhengig av andre. Den som klarer seg selv, blir gjerne møtt med respekt. Den som trenger hjelp, kan lettere bli møtt med medlidenhet, uro eller stilltiende rangering.

Selvstendighet er blitt mer enn en praktisk ferdighet.

Det er blitt et moralsk ideal.

Det merkes i språket. Vi sier at et menneske «klarer seg» når det ikke trenger hjelp. Vi omtaler noen som en «belastning» når omsorgsbehovet blir omfattende. Vi forbinder verdighet med kontroll over kroppen, arbeidsevne, økonomisk uavhengighet og evnen til å treffe beslutninger uten støtte.

Da kan avhengighet lett fremstå som det motsatte av verdighet.

Martha Nussbaum utfordrer denne forestillingen.


Hun hevder at sårbarhet, kroppslige behov og avhengighet av omsorg ikke er uheldige avvik fra det egentlige menneskelivet. De er en del av menneskelivet selv. Vi er ikke først uavhengige vesener som noen ganger rammes av avhengighet. Vi er fra begynnelsen og gjennom hele livet innvevd i relasjoner, institusjoner og former for omsorg vi ikke kan skape alene.

Dette forandrer spørsmålet.

I stedet for å spørre hvordan mennesket kan frigjøre seg fra all avhengighet, må vi spørre hvordan avhengighetsrelasjoner kan formes slik at de beskytter frihet, integritet og verdighet.

Omsorg er ikke det motsatte av verdighet.

Men omsorg kan gis på måter som enten styrker eller krenker den.

Myten om det uavhengige mennesket

Det moderne vestlige mennesket blir ofte fremstilt som et selvstendig individ. Det eier seg selv, tenker med sin egen fornuft og inngår relasjoner av fri vilje. Det er i stand til å formulere sine interesser, forhandle med andre og ta ansvar for konsekvensene av egne valg.

Dette mennesket står sentralt i mange teorier om politikk og rettferdighet.

I sosialkontrakttradisjonen blir samfunnet gjerne forstått som noe frie og noenlunde like mennesker blir enige om å etablere. De avgir noe frihet for å oppnå sikkerhet, orden og gjensidige fordeler.

Men dette bildet dekker bare en del av menneskelivet.

Spedbarnet kan ikke inngå noen kontrakt. Det kan ikke overleve uten omfattende omsorg. Det gamle mennesket som har mistet hukommelse eller bevegelighet, kan være avhengig av andre i hver minste del av dagen. Den alvorlig syke kan ikke alltid forvalte egne interesser. Mennesket med omfattende kognitive funksjonsnedsettelser kan trenge støtte for å forstå, velge og kommunisere.

Er disse menneskene mindre menneskelige fordi de ikke passer til idealet om den uavhengige borgeren?

Nussbaum svarer nei.

Problemet ligger ikke i menneskene.

Problemet ligger i teorien.

En rettferdighetsteori som bare passer for den sterke, friske og selvhjulpne, beskriver ikke mennesket slik mennesket faktisk er. Den beskriver et idealisert utsnitt av menneskelivet og gjør dette utsnittet til norm for alle.

Men vi er ikke selvtilstrekkelige vesener.

Ingen av oss har gitt oss selv livet. Ingen har lært seg språk alene. Ingen har utviklet identitet uten andres blikk, berøring og svar. Selv den mest vellykkede og selvstendige borgeren er avhengig av mat produsert av andre, infrastrukturer andre vedlikeholder, institusjoner andre bærer og relasjoner som gir livet mening.

Uavhengighet er derfor aldri absolutt.

Den er alltid støttet.

Vi begynner livet i andres hender

Menneskelivet begynner i radikal avhengighet.

Barnet kan ikke beskytte seg mot kulde, skaffe mat eller forstå sine egne behov. Det er prisgitt andre menneskers oppmerksomhet. Det må bli løftet før det kan reise seg. Det må bli møtt før det kan utvikle et selv.

Omsorgen kommer før autonomien.

Dette er ikke bare en biologisk kjensgjerning. Det er også en filosofisk innsikt.

Det mennesket som senere sier «jeg», er blitt til gjennom et «du». Det har lært å forstå seg selv fordi noen først forstod det. Det har fått tillit til verden fordi noen svarte på gråt, frykt og behov.

Selvstendighet vokser derfor frem av avhengighet.

Den står ikke i motsetning til den.

Det samme gjelder senere i livet. Når vi blir syke, mister noen eller utsettes for krise, kan vi på nytt trenge at andre bærer deler av livet for oss. Det kan være praktisk hjelp, men også noe mer: et annet menneskes ro, språk eller nærvær.

Et menneske som trenger støtte, vender ikke nødvendigvis tilbake til en mindreverdig tilstand.

Det viser bare at livet alltid har vært relasjonelt.

Avhengighetens skam

Likevel opplever mange skam når de trenger hjelp.

Skammen kan oppstå når kroppen ikke lenger lystrer, når man må be om støtte til noe man tidligere gjorde selv, eller når man føler at andre må bruke tid og ressurser på ens liv.

Den eldre kan beklage at hun er til bry.

Den syke kan føle skyld fordi familien må endre sine planer.

Mennesket som trenger omfattende tjenester, kan lære at behovene må gjøres små og beskjedne for ikke å kreve for mye.

Denne skammen kommer ikke bare innenfra.

Den formes av samfunnets idealer.

Når selvhjulpenhet blir mål på voksenhet, kan hjelp oppleves som tap av status. Når produktivitet blir mål på verdi, kan den som ikke kan arbeide, begynne å tvile på sin plass. Når omsorg fremstilles som en kostnad, kan mennesket identifisere seg med kostnaden.

Da blir spørsmålet ikke bare: Hva trenger jeg?

Det blir: Har jeg rett til å trenge dette?

Et rettferdig samfunn må kunne svare tydelig:

Ja.

Behovet for omsorg gjør ikke et menneske mindre verdig.

Det gjør omsorgen mer forpliktende.

Verdighet som ikke må fortjenes

Verdighet er et av de mest brukte ordene i etikk, helsearbeid og sosialt arbeid. Samtidig er det et ord som lett blir uklart.

Hva betyr det at alle mennesker har verdighet?

Dersom verdigheten avhenger av intelligens, selvkontroll, moral, arbeidsevne eller sosial nytte, er den ikke lenger ubetinget. Da kan den øke og minske etter hvor godt mennesket fungerer.

Nussbaums tenkning bygger på at verdigheten er knyttet til menneskelivet selv.

Den skal ikke fortjenes.

Dette betyr ikke at alle handlinger er verdige, eller at mennesker ikke kan krenke andre. Det betyr at mennesket aldri kan reduseres til sin funksjon, diagnose, prestasjon eller kostnad.

Et menneske som ikke kan uttrykke seg med ord, har ikke mindre verdighet.

Et menneske som trenger hjelp til hele hverdagen, har ikke mindre verdighet.

Et menneske som ikke kan gjengjelde omsorgen, har ikke mindre verdighet.

Omsorgens oppgave er derfor ikke å gi verdighet til noen som mangler den.

Omsorgens oppgave er å møte den verdigheten som allerede finnes.

Kroppen som avslører vår sårbarhet

Vi lever gjennom kroppen.

Kroppen er ikke bare noe vi har. Den er måten vi er til stede i verden på. Gjennom kroppen sanser vi, beveger oss, arbeider, elsker og møter andre.

Men kroppen er også sårbar.

Den kan bli skadet, syk og utslitt. Den kan miste funksjoner. Den kan trenge hjelp til de mest intime handlingene.

Dette utfordrer forestillingen om at verdighet først og fremst er knyttet til kontroll.

Et menneske som ikke lenger kontrollerer blære, bevegelser eller tale, mister ikke sin menneskelighet. Men det blir mer avhengig av hvordan andre forholder seg til kroppen.

Omsorg for kroppen er derfor alltid etisk ladet.

Den som hjelper et menneske med vask, påkledning, toalettbesøk eller medisinsk behandling, står svært nær den andres sårbarhet. Oppgaven kan utføres teknisk korrekt og likevel oppleves krenkende. Den kan også utføres med en oppmerksomhet som beskytter integritet.

Forskjellen kan ligge i små handlinger.

Om man banker på døren.

Om man forklarer hva som skal skje.

Om man dekker til kroppen.

Om man lar personen bruke den tiden han trenger.

Om man spør før man berører.

Verdighet viser seg ofte i tempoet omsorgen gis i.

Når kroppen blir en oppgave

Profesjonelle tjenester må nødvendigvis organisere arbeidet. Oppgaver skal fordeles, dokumenteres og gjennomføres. Dette er nødvendig for kvalitet og sikkerhet.

Men organiseringen kan også føre til at mennesket blir borte bak oppgaven.

Den ansatte skal «ta morgenstellet», «gi medisiner» eller «hjelpe med måltidet». Språket er praktisk, men det kan skape avstand. Kroppen blir noe arbeidet skal utføres på.

Når tidspresset øker, blir faren større.

Da kan effektiviteten komme i konflikt med menneskets rytme. Den ansatte vet hva som skal skje, mens personen som mottar hjelpen, ikke har rukket å forstå eller samtykke. Kroppen flyttes, vaskes eller kles på før mennesket selv er kommet inn i situasjonen.

Omsorg kan da bli en form for overtakelse.

Ikke nødvendigvis fordi hjelperen vil dominere, men fordi systemets tid er raskere enn den andres tid.

Rettferdig omsorg må derfor stille et vanskelig spørsmål:

Hvem sitt tempo styrer situasjonen?

Avhengighet og makt

Avhengighet skaper makt.

Den som trenger noe en annen kontrollerer, befinner seg i en sårbar posisjon. Dette gjelder i familien, i medisinen, i sosialt arbeid og i omsorgstjenestene.

Den profesjonelle har kunnskap, tilgang, nøkler, tid og institusjonell myndighet. Den som mottar tjenesten, kan være avhengig av alt dette.

Denne asymmetrien forsvinner ikke fordi relasjonen er varm og omsorgsfull.

Tvert imot kan makten bli vanskeligere å se når intensjonene er gode.

Den ansatte kan oppriktig ønske det beste for personen. Men hvem definerer hva «det beste» er? Hvem avgjør hvilke risikoer som er akseptable? Hvem bestemmer når omsorgen skal gis, og på hvilken måte?

Omsorg kan beskytte mennesket mot fare.

Men den kan også beskytte organisasjonen mot usikkerhet.

Det som omtales som trygghet, kan noen ganger være kontroll. Det som beskrives som struktur, kan bli overstyring. Det som kalles omsorg, kan være en ordning som først og fremst gjør arbeidshverdagen enklere.

Derfor må omsorg alltid ledsages av maktkritikk.

«For ditt eget beste»

Setningen «vi gjør dette for ditt eget beste» uttrykker noe grunnleggende ved omsorg.

Noen ganger vet en hjelper mer om risikoen enn personen selv. Et barn må beskyttes mot fare. Et menneske i psykose kan trenge hjelp til å unngå alvorlig skade. En person med kognitive vansker kan ha behov for støtte til å forstå konsekvenser.

Det ville være uansvarlig å late som om alle valg alltid kan overlates helt til individet.

Men setningen er farlig.

Den kan avslutte samtalen. Den kan gjøre hjelperens fortolkning uangripelig. Den kan skjule at omsorgen også tjener andre interesser.

Nussbaum aksepterer at en begrenset form for paternalisme kan være nødvendig. Men hennes teori peker samtidig mot et avgjørende krav: Den som trenger beskyttelse, skal fortsatt møtes som et menneske med egne ønsker, følelser og muligheter.

Beskyttelse skal ikke bli et nytt navn på lydighet.

Omsorgens oppgave er ikke å overta livet, men å støtte mennesket i å leve det.

Relasjonell frihet

Frihet forstås ofte som fravær av innblanding.

Jeg er fri når andre lar meg være i fred. Dette er en viktig side ved friheten. Mennesker trenger beskyttelse mot tvang, kontroll og overgrep.

Men for mennesker som trenger omsorg, er frihet også avhengig av hjelp.

En rullestolbruker kan trenge assistanse for å forlate hjemmet. En person med synsnedsettelse kan trenge tilgjengelig informasjon. Et menneske med kognitive vansker kan trenge støtte for å forstå et valg. Den syke kan trenge behandling for å kunne delta i livet.

Friheten oppstår da ikke uten relasjonen.

Den oppstår gjennom relasjonen.

Dette kan kalles relasjonell frihet. Mennesket er ikke fritt fordi det ikke trenger noen, men fordi støtten er utformet slik at det kan handle, velge og delta.

Den gode hjelperen gjør ikke alltid mindre.

Men hjelpen gjør den andres liv større.

Å motta hjelp uten å miste seg selv

Det finnes en viktig forskjell mellom å få hjelp og å bli overtatt.

Hjelp kan støtte et menneskes egen handling. Den kan gjøre det mulig å fortsette å være opphav til det man gjør. Men hjelp kan også erstatte personen.

Den ansatte kan velge klær, bestemme måltid, planlegge dagen og svare i samtalen. Alt kan skje effektivt og velment. Likevel kan mennesket gradvis bli tilskuer til sitt eget liv.

Dette er en særlig fare når hjelpen gis over lang tid.

Hvis andre alltid gjør det raskere, riktigere eller tryggere, kan personen miste erfaringen av å kunne påvirke.

Omsorg som beskytter verdighet, må derfor være oppmerksom på restene av handling.

Hva kan personen gjøre selv?

Hva kan gjøres sammen?

Hvor kan hjelperen vente?

Dette handler ikke om å kreve prestasjon. Mennesket skal ikke måtte demonstrere selvstendighet for å fortjene respekt.

Det handler om å beskytte det handlende subjektet som finnes også i avhengigheten.

Omsorg som anerkjennelse

Omsorg er mer enn utførelse av oppgaver.

Den kan også være anerkjennelse.

Å anerkjenne et menneske er å møte det som noen, ikke bare som noe. Det er å se at den andres erfaring har betydning, også når den uttrykkes annerledes enn vår egen.

Et menneske kan ha vansker med å forklare hvorfor det blir urolig. Den profesjonelle kan velge å behandle uroen som atferd som skal reguleres. Men hun kan også spørre hva uroen forteller.

Kanskje er det for mange mennesker i rommet. Kanskje har en kjent person forsvunnet. Kanskje skjer ting for raskt. Kanskje kroppen gjør vondt.

Anerkjennende omsorg forsøker å forstå uttrykket før den korrigerer det.

Den spør ikke bare: Hvordan får vi dette til å stoppe?

Den spør: Hva forsøker mennesket å si?

Den profesjonelle relasjonen

Profesjonell omsorg skiller seg fra omsorg mellom familie og venner.

Den er knyttet til et yrke, et mandat og en organisasjon. Den skal kunne begrunnes faglig og etisk. Den skal være pålitelig også når den personlige sympatien mangler.

Dette er en styrke.

Et menneske skal ikke være avhengig av å bli likt for å få god omsorg.

Men profesjonaliseringen har også en risiko. Omsorgen kan bli så regulert at relasjonen mister menneskelig nærvær. Den ansatte kan utføre oppgaven korrekt uten egentlig å møte personen.

Da blir spørsmålet om profesjonell distanse viktig.

Distanse kan beskytte begge parter. Men distanse må ikke bli kulde. Den gode profesjonelle relasjonen trenger både grenser og engasjement.

Omsorg er ikke bare å gjøre noe for et menneske.

Det er også å være til stede med det.

Kontinuitetens betydning

Mennesker som mottar omfattende tjenester, møter ofte mange hjelpere.

Vakter skifter. Ansatte slutter. Tjenester legges ut på anbud eller reorganiseres. Fra organisasjonens perspektiv kan dette være nødvendige endringer.

For personen kan det være gjentatte relasjonelle brudd.

Den nye hjelperen kjenner ikke kroppens signaler, vanene, fryktene eller humoren. Alt må læres på nytt. Personen må på nytt utlevere sin sårbarhet til et fremmed menneske.

Kontinuitet er derfor ikke bare en administrativ fordel.

Det er en del av omsorgens kvalitet.

Nussbaum plasserer følelser og tilknytning blant de grunnleggende menneskelige mulighetene. Det betyr at relasjonell stabilitet ikke bare handler om trivsel. Den har betydning for rettferdighet.

Et menneske skal kunne knytte seg til andre uten at organiseringen stadig river relasjonene bort.

Omsorgens følelsesliv

Omsorg blir ofte omtalt som arbeid, tjeneste eller ressurs. Men omsorg har også et følelsesmessig innhold.

Den som trenger hjelp, kan kjenne takknemlighet, skam, sinne, sorg eller frykt. Den som gir hjelp, kan kjenne varme, avmakt, irritasjon og ansvar.

Disse følelsene forsvinner ikke fordi relasjonen er profesjonell.

De må forstås.

En omsorgsmottaker kan bli sint på den hun er mest avhengig av. Dette kan være vanskelig for hjelperen. Men sinnet kan også være et uttrykk for verdighet: en motstand mot å miste kontroll.

Den ansatte kan kjenne seg utilstrekkelig når behovene er større enn ressursene. Hun kan utvikle en beskyttende avstand eller begynne å se personen som krevende.

Etisk praksis krever rom for refleksjon over slike følelser. Ellers kan de komme til uttrykk gjennom språk, rutiner og beslutninger uten at noen erkjenner dem.

Omsorg og gjensidighet

Vi tenker ofte at omsorg går én vei.

Én gir, og én mottar.

Men menneskelige relasjoner er sjelden så enkle.

Den som mottar omsorg, kan gi tillit, nærhet, humor og erfaring. Et menneske som trenger mye hjelp, kan fortsatt ha stor betydning for andres liv.

Dette betyr ikke at omsorgsmottakeren skal måtte gjengjelde hjelpen. Verdighet kan ikke avhenge av hva personen gir tilbake.

Men det minner oss om at den som trenger omsorg, ikke er tom eller passiv.

Relasjonen kan være asymmetrisk uten å være ensidig.

Omsorg kan skape et møte hvor begge påvirkes.

Familienes omsorg

Mye omsorg gis av familie.

Foreldre følger barn med omfattende behov gjennom et helt liv. Ektefeller pleier hverandre gjennom sykdom. Voksne barn hjelper gamle foreldre.

Denne omsorgen kan springe ut av kjærlighet og lojalitet. Men den kan også bli overveldende.

Et samfunn som romantiserer familiens omsorg, kan skjule belastningen. Det kan forvente at familien tar ansvar uten tilstrekkelig støtte, og dermed gjøre omsorgen privat på en måte som skaper ny urettferdighet.

Nussbaums perspektiv innebærer at omsorg er et offentlig ansvar.

Ikke fordi familien er uviktig, men fordi grunnleggende menneskelige muligheter ikke skal avhenge av hvor ressurssterk eller utholdende familien er.

Den som trenger omsorg, har rettigheter.

Den som gir omsorg, har også et liv.

Rettferdighet må beskytte begge.

Kjønn og den usynlige omsorgen

Omsorgsarbeid har historisk i stor grad vært utført av kvinner.

Mye av dette arbeidet har vært ubetalt eller lavt lønnet. Det er blitt oppfattet som en naturlig forlengelse av kvinnelighet, kjærlighet og familieansvar.

Dermed har samfunnet kunnet nyte godt av omsorgen uten å verdsette den fullt ut.

Hvis omsorg er en grunnbetingelse for menneskelig liv, må den også behandles som en sentral samfunnsoppgave.

Det betyr ordentlige arbeidsvilkår, tid, kompetanse og politisk prioritering.

Et samfunn som hyller omsorg i festtalene, men organiserer den under tidspress og lav status, uttrykker en dyp motsigelse.

Omsorgens verdi må vise seg i måten omsorgsarbeidet verdsettes på.

Når markedet møter omsorgen

I moderne velferdstjenester blir omsorg noen ganger organisert gjennom konkurranse, måling og anbud.

Slike ordninger kan ha mål om effektivitet og kvalitet. Men omsorg lar seg ikke fullt ut forstå som en standardisert vare.

Omsorg bygger ofte på kjennskap, kontinuitet og tillit. Dette tar tid å utvikle og kan ikke uten videre flyttes fra én leverandør til en annen.

Når tjenestetilbydere skiftes ut, kan systemet betrakte tjenesten som den samme. Men for personen er den ikke nødvendigvis det.

Menneskene er forskjellige.

Relasjonen er forskjellig.

Et rettferdig omsorgssystem må derfor vurdere mer enn pris og målbare ytelser. Det må spørre hva organiseringen gjør med menneskets tilknytning, trygghet og mulighet til medvirkning.

Det som er økonomisk utskiftbart, kan være menneskelig uerstattelig.

Alderdom og tapet av kontroll

Alderdommen gjør avhengigheten synlig.

Kroppen blir langsommere. Sansene svekkes. Det som tidligere var enkelt, kan kreve hjelp. Noen mister språk, hukommelse eller orienteringsevne.

I en kultur som idealiserer ungdom, fart og selvstendighet, kan alderdommen fremstå som et tap av verdi.

Men verdigheten følger ikke funksjonsnivået.

Det gamle mennesket er fortsatt et menneske med historie, relasjoner og en særegen måte å være i verden på. Også når ordene forsvinner, finnes uttrykk, rytmer og gjenkjennelse.

Omsorg i alderdommen krever derfor mer enn å holde kroppen i live.

Den må beskytte personens livsverden.

Hvilken musikk kjenner han?

Hva gjør henne trygg?

Hvilke rutiner bærer minnene?

Når omsorgen kjenner historien, møter den ikke bare en kropp som trenger hjelp.

Den møter et levd liv.

Sykdom og verdighet

Sykdom kan gjøre mennesket fremmed for seg selv.

Kroppen som tidligere var taus og pålitelig, blir plutselig krevende. Man må be om hjelp, vente på svar og la andre undersøke det private.

Dette kan oppleves som tap av verdighet.

Men det er viktig å skille mellom å miste kontroll og å miste verdighet.

Kontrollen kan reduseres.

Verdigheten består.

Det avgjørende blir hvordan mennesket blir møtt. Får personen informasjon? Blir frykten tatt på alvor? Blir kroppen behandlet med respekt? Får mennesket delta i beslutninger så langt det er mulig?

Omsorg kan ikke alltid gjenopprette helsen.

Men den kan beskytte mennesket mot å forsvinne bak sykdommen.

Funksjonshemming og avhengighet

Mennesker med funksjonsnedsettelser blir ofte forstått gjennom behovet for hjelp.

Dette kan skjule alt det andre: interesser, relasjoner, humor, motstand og livsprosjekter.

Samtidig skal ikke behovet fornektes.

En inkluderende filosofi må kunne holde to tanker sammen: Funksjonsnedsettelsen er ikke hele mennesket, men den kan skape reelle behov for støtte.

Nussbaum gjør nettopp dette. Hun romantiserer ikke avhengigheten, men hun nekter å gjøre den til et tegn på mindre menneskeverd.

Spørsmålet blir derfor ikke hvordan mennesket kan gjøres mest mulig likt den uavhengige normen.

Spørsmålet blir hvordan støtten kan gi tilgang til liv, tilknytning, lek, integritet og innflytelse.

Omsorgens dobbelthet

Omsorg er aldri bare god.

Den har en dobbelthet.

Den kan beskytte og begrense.

Den kan frigjøre og kontrollere.

Den kan styrke stemmen eller tale over den.

Det er nettopp derfor omsorg trenger etikk.

Gode intensjoner er ikke nok. Hjelperen må være villig til å spørre hvordan omsorgen oppleves fra den andres side.

Gir jeg støtte, eller overtar jeg?

Beskytter jeg personen, eller beskytter jeg systemets orden?

Lytter jeg til motstand, eller tolker jeg den bare som et problem?

Den etiske omsorgen er ikke feilfri.

Men den er selvkritisk.

Når det ikke finnes en enkel løsning

Omsorgens dilemmaer kan ikke alltid løses.

En person kan ønske noe som innebærer alvorlig risiko. Familien kan mene én ting, den profesjonelle noe annet og personen selv en tredje. Ressursene kan være utilstrekkelige.

Da finnes det ikke alltid én handling som ivaretar alle verdier samtidig.

Men det finnes bedre og dårligere måter å møte dilemmaet på.

En bedre praksis synliggjør konflikten. Den lytter til personen, undersøker alternativer og begrunner beslutningen. Den erkjenner tapet som kan oppstå.

En dårligere praksis skjuler makten bak rutiner og språk om nødvendighet.

Rettferdig omsorg innebærer ikke at alle ønsker blir oppfylt.

Men ingen skal reduseres til et objekt for andres beslutninger.

Det gode samfunnets mål

Hvordan vurderer vi om et samfunn er godt?

Vi kan måle økonomisk vekst, produktivitet og effektivitet. Men Nussbaum inviterer oss til å spørre noe annet:

Hvordan lever de som trenger mest støtte?

Får de beholde integritet?

Har de mulighet til tilknytning?

Blir deres følelser og ønsker tatt på alvor?

Kan de påvirke sin egen hverdag?

Et samfunn viser sitt menneskesyn i måten det organiserer avhengighet på.

Hvis den som trenger omsorg, blir behandlet som byrde, avsløres et snevert menneskeideal.

Hvis omsorgen gis slik at mennesket kan leve med frihet, tilhørighet og selvrespekt, blir rettferdigheten konkret.

Omsorg som menneskelig fellesskap

Omsorg minner oss om at menneskelivet ikke er et individuelt prosjekt alene.

Vi blir til gjennom andre.

Vi bæres når vi ikke kan bære oss selv.

Dette skjer i livets begynnelse, i sykdom, i krise og ofte i alderdommen.

Ingen kan garantere at de aldri vil trenge omfattende hjelp.

Det mennesket vi omtaler som avhengig, er derfor ikke et fremmed unntak.

Det viser oss vår egen mulige fremtid og vår allerede eksisterende sårbarhet.

Omsorgen binder livsfasene sammen. Den minner den sterke om at styrken ikke er varig, og den som trenger hjelp om at behovet ikke gjør ham mindre menneskelig.

Verdighet i avhengigheten

Omsorg er ikke det motsatte av verdighet.

Det motsatte av verdighet er å bli behandlet som om ens liv, kropp og stemme ikke betyr noe.

Et menneske kan være helt avhengig av andre og likevel bli møtt med respekt, frihet og anerkjennelse. Et annet kan være fysisk selvhjulpent, men leve i relasjoner som krenker og kontrollerer.

Avhengigheten avgjør ikke verdigheten.

Måten avhengigheten organiseres på, gjør en forskjell.

Rettferdig omsorg beskytter retten til å være et subjekt også når man trenger hjelp. Den lar mennesket få være opphav til sitt liv så langt det er mulig. Den gir støtte uten å gjøre personen usynlig.

Det menneskelige grunnvilkåret

Nussbaums filosofi viser oss at avhengighet ikke er en feil ved mennesket.

Den er et grunnvilkår.

Vi er kroppslige, sårbare og relasjonelle vesener. Vi trenger andre for å overleve, utvikle oss og finne mening.

Selvstendighet har verdi. Mennesker skal få styre sine egne liv og beskyttes mot unødvendig kontroll. Men selvstendigheten må forstås innenfor fellesskapet som gjør den mulig.

Den dypeste friheten er kanskje ikke å klare alt alene.

Det er å kunne motta hjelp uten å miste seg selv.

Et rettferdig samfunn er derfor ikke et samfunn hvor ingen er avhengige.

Det er et samfunn hvor avhengighet ikke fører til skam, utstøtelse eller tap av rettigheter.

Hvor omsorg ikke reduserer mennesket til et behov.

Hvor den som trenger hjelp, fortsatt blir sett som en borger, et medmenneske og et helt liv.

Omsorg er ikke verdighetens nederlag.

Den er en av måtene menneskelig verdighet blir båret på.


Vi er kroppslige, sårbare og relasjonelle vesener. 
Vi trenger andre for å overleve, utvikle oss og finne mening


Teksten bygger på mine forelesningsnotater om dette tema, et tema jeg ofte har undervist om for studenter i sosialt arbeid. Essayet er utviklet i en samtale med OpenAI/ChatGPT, som også har laget illustrasjonen.

Sunday, June 7, 2026

What Should a Human Being Be Able to Do and to Be?

What Should a Human Being Be Able to Do and to Be?

Martha Nussbaum and the Concrete Face of Justice

Justice is often discussed in abstract terms.

We speak of equality, freedom, rights, distribution, and human dignity. These words are necessary. They give us a language with which to criticise power and describe the principles on which a society ought to be built. Yet the words can also remain at a distance from human life.

A society may declare that everyone is equal in dignity while still being organised in such a way that some people cannot enter its buildings, understand its information, express their will, or participate in the communities where decisions are made.

The right exists on paper.

The opportunity is absent from life.

It is in this gap that Martha Nussbaum’s philosophy begins. She does not ask only which rights a person formally possesses. She asks what that person is actually able to do and to be within the conditions society has created.


The question is simply formulated, yet far-reaching:

What should every human being have a genuine opportunity to do and to be in order to live a life consistent with human dignity?

With this question, Nussbaum turns the gaze of justice away from abstract principles alone and towards concrete human life. She does not ask first how many resources a person has been given, but what those resources actually make possible. She does not ask only whether people have been treated equally, but whether they have in fact been given genuinely equal opportunities to live.

Justice thereby acquires a face.

The Human Being Behind the Theory

Political theories often begin with an idea of what a human being is.

This starting point is decisive, even when it is not stated explicitly. If the human being is imagined as rational, independent, and productive, society will be organised around those qualities. The person who can plan their own life, negotiate their interests, and contribute economically will easily appear as the typical citizen.

But who remains at the margins of the theory?

Often it is the person who needs help to understand, choose, and act. The child. The seriously ill person. The older person who has lost parts of their memory. The person with extensive cognitive disabilities. The person who cannot make themselves understood in society’s preferred language.

Such people may of course be included in a theory. They may receive care and protection. But they often enter only after the basic image of the citizen has already been drawn.

Nussbaum challenges this starting point. She argues that dependence, embodiment, and vulnerability are not special cases to be added later. They belong to human life itself.

We are born dependent on others. We live in bodies that may become ill or injured. We may lose abilities we once possessed. We need relationships in order to develop language, identity, and security. Even the most independent citizen depends on institutions, nature, care, and the work of other people.

The autonomous human being is therefore not the whole truth about humanity.

Nussbaum begins instead with a living, embodied, and relational human being. This person has needs, emotions, imagination, and the capacity to form attachments. They may flourish, but they may also be violated. They may act, but they are never completely independent.

A theory of justice must fit this human being, not an idealised creature none of us fully is.

From Resources to Opportunities

It is possible to distribute resources equally and still produce unjust outcomes.

Two people may receive the same sum of money, yet have very different possibilities of converting it into a good life. A wheelchair user may need more expensive transport or an adapted home. A person with serious illness may spend considerable resources simply maintaining the health others take for granted. A person with cognitive difficulties may need support to understand and use schemes that are formally available.

The same is true of rights. A right to education means little if the teaching cannot be understood. A right to work means little if the workplace is inaccessible. A right to political participation means little if information, premises, or support arrangements exclude people.

Nussbaum therefore directs attention towards what resources and rights are transformed into in people’s actual lives.

This is the core of her Capabilities Approach.

The English word capabilities is difficult to translate precisely. It does not primarily refer to inner abilities or skills. It concerns opportunities to which a person has genuine access. We might call them opportunities for action, opportunities for living, or enabling conditions.

What matters is not only what a person can do through their own power.

What matters is what the person has the opportunity to do in interaction with their social, political, economic, and material environment.

Some of the responsibility is thereby shifted from the individual to society.

When a person cannot participate, we should not automatically ask what is lacking in the person. We must also ask what is lacking in the environment.

Ability and Opportunity

The distinction between ability and opportunity is crucial.

A person may have the ability to move, but not the opportunity to enter a building because stairs block the way. Another person may have limited mobility and yet have a good opportunity to participate because the surroundings are accessible.

In the same way, a person may have the ability to express wishes, yet lack the opportunity to be heard. The person may speak slowly, use few words, or communicate through signs and bodily expressions. If no one gives them time or tries to understand, their voice effectively disappears.

The problem does not then lie entirely within the individual.

It also lies within the encounter.

This perspective challenges the medical understanding of disability as a characteristic of the body alone. An impairment may be real and significant, but the degree of disability also arises in the relationship between the person and the environment.

The staircase creates disability for the person who cannot walk. Inaccessible language creates disability for the person who needs simplified information. The rapid conversation creates disability for the person who needs more time.

Justice is therefore not only about repairing or training the individual.

It is also about changing the world.

A Life Consistent with Human Dignity

Nussbaum connects capabilities to human dignity. A just society must secure for every person access to a level of central opportunities that makes it possible to live a life of human dignity.

This does not mean that public authorities should determine how people must live.

Nussbaum distinguishes between capabilities and actual functionings. A capability means that a person may choose to do something, but is not compelled to do it.

A person should, for example, have the opportunity for political participation. But they should not be forced to engage in politics. They should have the opportunity to enter social relationships, but also the right to withdraw. They should have the opportunity for play and enjoyment, but not be required to participate in prescribed activities.

This protects freedom.

The task of society is not to produce identical lives. It is to create conditions in which different people can choose and develop lives in accordance with their own values, circumstances, and interests.

Justice therefore contains both something universal and something personal.

The universal is that all human beings should have access to basic opportunities for living.

The personal is how each individual chooses, or with support is helped, to shape their particular life.

The Ten Central Capabilities

Nussbaum proposes a list of ten central capabilities to which every human being should have access. The list is not intended as a complete description of the good life. It is rather a political minimum, a threshold below which a just society should not allow people to fall.

The capabilities include life, bodily health, bodily integrity, senses, imagination and thought, emotions, practical reason, affiliation, relation to other species, play, and control over one’s environment.

At first glance, the list may appear to be a simple enumeration. Yet it expresses a rich view of the human being.

The human being is not merely a body to be kept alive.

It is a sensing, thinking, feeling, and relational being. It needs security, but also freedom. It needs care, but also the opportunity to act. It needs seriousness, but also play. It needs other people, but also private space and influence over its own life.

The list therefore shows that justice cannot be reduced to income, health, or physical safety alone.

A person may be well nourished and medically cared for, yet still live without close relationships, privacy, participation in decisions, or joy.

Such a life is not necessarily organised justly.

Life

The first capability concerns life itself.

A person should have the opportunity to live a life of normal human length and not die prematurely or live under conditions so diminished that life loses its human possibilities.

This appears to be the most fundamental point. Without life there are no other capabilities.

Yet the right to life is not only a matter of preventing death. It also concerns which lives society chooses to protect and which lives are regarded as less valuable.

People with severe disabilities have throughout history been subjected to the belief that their lives are less complete. Sometimes this has been expressed brutally. At other times it appears in more concealed judgements about quality of life, worthiness for treatment, and social cost.

Nussbaum’s starting point is that a life does not lose its dignity because it depends on assistance.

The right to life also belongs to the life that cannot defend itself.

Bodily Health

The second capability concerns bodily health: access to nourishment, housing, medical care, and conditions that make physical development possible.

Health is not merely a private project.

People’s health is shaped by housing, economy, working conditions, environment, relationships, and access to services. Bodily health therefore also becomes a question of justice.

Two people may receive the same medical treatment yet have very different opportunities to live healthily. One has secure housing, knowledge, transport, and people who can follow up. The other lives with unpredictability, poverty, or social isolation.

It is not sufficient to offer the same service when the conditions for using it are unequal.

For people who need long-term care, bodily health becomes closely linked to the quality of everyday life. Sleep, food, activity, safety, and continuity are not minor details. They constitute the world of the body.

Just care must therefore see the whole person’s life situation, not only the diagnosis.

Bodily Integrity

Bodily integrity concerns the ability to move freely, be protected from violence and abuse, have sexual self-determination, and exercise control over one’s own body.

This becomes particularly demanding when a person needs help with intimate care.

Assistance with washing, dressing, using the toilet, and medical treatment may be necessary. But necessity does not suspend human integrity. On the contrary, it intensifies the responsibility of the helper.

There is a difference between completing a task and meeting a human being.

Bodily assistance can be given in a way that protects privacy, choice, and dignity. It can also be provided so quickly and routinely that the body is treated as a field of work.

The person receiving assistance may depend on the employee’s hands.

But the body still belongs to the person.

Bodily integrity therefore requires more than the absence of violence. It requires respect for boundaries, pace, gender, safety, and the right to say no.

Senses, Imagination, and Thought

Nussbaum includes the capability to use the senses, imagine, think, and reason. This presupposes education, access to culture, freedom of expression, and the possibility of religious or philosophical development.

It is an important point that justice also concerns the person’s inner world.

The human being needs more than care and protection. It needs access to knowledge, art, language, nature, music, and stories. It needs the opportunity to develop imagination and understand the world.

This also applies to people with cognitive disabilities.

Low expectations can become a form of injustice. When society assumes that a person cannot learn, understand, or enjoy cultural expression, opportunities are reduced before the person has even been allowed to try.

Education and culture must therefore not be reserved for those who can perform in society’s usual ways.

People learn differently. They express understanding differently. But the need for meaning and stimulation belongs to human life.

Emotions

Nussbaum gives emotions a central place.

A person should be able to form attachments to people and things, love those who love and care for them, grieve over absence, and experience longing, gratitude, and justified anger. Society should not shape people’s lives in ways that destroy emotional development through fear and anxiety.

This is remarkable within a theory of justice.

Emotions are often regarded as private and politically irrelevant. Nussbaum shows, by contrast, that society influences which relationships people can form, how secure they can be, and whether they are allowed to retain the attachments that give life continuity.

For people who receive extensive services, frequent changes of staff and service providers can create ruptures. From the perspective of the system, these may be administrative changes. For the person, they may mean the loss of someone they have learned to trust.

Attachment takes time.

When relationships are repeatedly broken, it is not only well-being that is affected. A central human capability is weakened.

Justice must therefore also take emotional life seriously.

Practical Reason

Practical reason concerns the ability to form a conception of the good and critically reflect on the planning of one’s own life.

This point may seem difficult when we think of people with severe cognitive disabilities. Can everyone form a coherent conception of the good life?

Nussbaum’s answer is not that everyone must do so in the same way or without assistance.

Practical reason can be supported. A person may need others who help clarify alternatives, understand reactions, and build a life around that person’s interests and values.

What matters is that life is not shaped solely by other people’s ideas of what is good.

A person may not be able to formulate a long-term life plan. But she may show clear preferences. She may like some people and avoid others. She may seek particular activities, places, or rhythms.

These expressions must be taken seriously as parts of her conception of the good.

Justice does not require all people to become equally autonomous.

It requires that supported will also be given significance.

Affiliation

Affiliation is one of Nussbaum’s most central capabilities.

It involves being able to live with and in relation to other human beings, show concern, participate in different forms of social interaction, and imagine another person’s situation. It also involves having the social basis for self-respect and being treated as a person of equal worth.

Here the personal and the political meet.

Affiliation concerns friendship, love, and community. But it also concerns discrimination, status, and public recognition.

A person cannot create self-respect entirely alone. Self-understanding is shaped by how others meet us. If a person is continually ignored, underestimated, or treated as a burden, it becomes harder to experience oneself as equal.

Self-respect requires a social basis.

This means that dignity is not only an inner quality. It must be confirmed through institutions, relationships, and practices.

Being invited, listened to, and counted is therefore not merely a pleasant addition to life.

It is justice.

Other Species

Nussbaum also includes the capability to live with concern for and in relation to animals, plants, and nature.

This demonstrates the breadth of her view of humanity. The human being does not live only in political institutions and social relationships. It also lives in a more-than-human world.

For many people, animals, gardens, forests, and landscapes have great significance. Nature may provide calm, belonging, and an experience of meaning. A person who struggles with complex social communication may experience an immediate connection with animals or particular places.

Access to nature can therefore be part of a good life, not merely a leisure activity for those with sufficient money and physical ability.

When institutions and homes are planned, the relationship to nature can easily be forgotten. Yet a room without a view, a daily life without fresh air, and a life without contact with living surroundings may be a serious restriction.

Justice also concerns the human being’s place in nature.

Play

That play appears on the list of central capabilities is both surprising and important.

Play is often associated with children or with something one may enjoy after serious needs have been met. Nussbaum makes play part of justice.

A person should be able to laugh, play, and participate in recreation.

This reminds us that a dignified life is not merely a safe life. It must also contain joy, spontaneity, and unproductive time.

Within services, life can easily be organised around goals, interventions, and development. Activities must have a purpose. Training must improve a skill. Social interaction must be part of a plan.

But something deeply human arises precisely when an action does not have to be justified by usefulness.

We sing because singing brings joy. We play because the game is enjoyable. We joke, laugh, and repeat something without it having to produce a measurable result.

A society that secures survival but provides no room for joy has not yet secured a fully human life.

Control over One’s Environment

The final capability concerns control over one’s political and material environment.

Politically, this means being able to participate in elections and decisions that affect one’s life. Materially, it concerns property, work, and the opportunity to be treated as an acting person in working life.

For people receiving services, political influence often begins close to home.

Who enters the home? When is assistance provided? What does the day look like? Which people does the person wish to spend time with? Which risks is she willing to take?

These are not merely practical questions.

They concern power.

A person who cannot influence their own everyday environment can hardly experience full citizenship. Even if others act with care, the person remains outside the decisions that shape life.

Influence therefore requires that services do not merely ask what the person thinks, but allow the answer to have consequences.

There is a difference between being heard and having influence.

Justice requires both.

A Threshold, Not a Maximum

Nussbaum understands the central capabilities as a threshold. Society should ensure that everyone rises above a certain minimum level.

This is not the same as creating complete equality in every aspect of life.

People will have different interests, abilities, relationships, and life projects. Nussbaum does not want the state to eliminate every difference. But no one should be abandoned to a life in which basic human capabilities are absent.

The threshold makes the theory both ambitious and limited.

It is ambitious because it demands more than formal freedom. Society must actively create conditions that enable people to live dignified lives.

It is limited because it does not prescribe what the good life must look like beyond the threshold. People may choose differently and give different things priority.

But the threshold raises difficult questions.

How high should it be set? Who should decide what is sufficient? How should different capabilities be weighed against one another when resources are limited?

Nussbaum’s list does not resolve every political conflict.

But it makes the conflicts clearer.

It forces us to ask which parts of human life we are willing to allow some people to lack.

Can the Good Life Be Defined?

A common objection to Nussbaum is that she describes the good life too concretely.

What gives the philosopher the right to decide which capabilities all human beings should value? Can the list become paternalistic? Can it impose a particular Western understanding of human development on other cultures?

These are serious questions.

Amartya Sen, who has also developed the capability approach, has been more reluctant to formulate a fixed list. He argues that which capabilities should be prioritised ought to be determined through public discussion and democratic processes.

Nussbaum responds that her list is open to revision and that its points are framed at such a general level that they can be realised in different ways across cultures and forms of life.

Play can take many forms. Affiliation may be lived through different families and communities. Practical reason may be expressed through different worldviews. Political participation may be organised in different ways.

Yet the tension remains.

A theory of justice must, on the one hand, respect pluralism. On the other, it must be able to criticise societies in which people are denied basic freedom, health, integrity, and participation.

If we say that all forms of life are equally valid, we may lose the language needed to criticise oppression.

If we define the good life too precisely, we may ourselves become oppressive.

Nussbaum’s list is an attempt to move between these extremes.

The Freedom to Choose Differently

The capability approach distinguishes between having an opportunity and making use of it.

This protects the human right to choose differently from what others expect.

A person may have access to education without wanting a long academic education. They may have opportunities for social participation but prefer a quieter life. They may have access to work but choose other forms of activity.

A just society makes capabilities available without turning them into demands for performance.

This is particularly important for people with disabilities. Inclusion may otherwise slide into pressure to live as much like the majority as possible.

The person should be included, but must not have to prove their worth by becoming normal.

The goal of justice is not normality.

It is dignity and genuine freedom.

This also includes the right to a life in which one needs others. Independence should not be understood as the absence of help, but as the opportunity to influence how assistance is given.

A person may be extensively dependent and still possess self-determination.

Freedom can be relational.

Care as Part of Justice

Traditionally, care has often been placed outside theories of justice. Justice has concerned public institutions, laws, and distribution, while care has been regarded as private, familial, and emotional.

Nussbaum breaks down this distinction.

If human beings need care in order to develop and exercise basic capabilities, then care becomes part of justice.

A child needs care in order to develop language, emotions, and practical reason. A sick person needs care to preserve health and integrity. A person with extensive disabilities may need support to express wishes, form relationships, and influence their environment.

Care is therefore not merely kindness.

It is a condition of social life.

But this also means that care work itself must be organised justly. Those who provide care need opportunities for health, rest, work, and participation. If society shifts responsibility for care onto families, often women, without sufficient support, new injustice is created.

Justice must include both the person who needs care and the person who provides it.

The Professional as a Creator of Possibilities

Nussbaum’s theory has particular significance for health and social work practice.

The professional can be understood as someone who helps expand or restrict another person’s field of possibilities.

This is a great responsibility.

A social worker, disability support worker, nurse, or personal assistant does not merely provide a specific service. Through the manner in which the service is provided, the professional influences the person’s access to integrity, affiliation, self-determination, and participation.

The same assistance can be given in different ways.

A person may be transported to an activity without becoming a participant. They may receive food without having influence over the meal. They may be physically safe without feeling safe. They may receive many services and still possess few opportunities for living.

Professional work must therefore ask more than whether the task was completed.

Which capability was strengthened?

Which may have been weakened?

Did the action contribute to the person having greater ownership of life, or did it make them more passive and dependent?

This is practical philosophy in its most concrete sense.

When Capabilities Conflict

The central capabilities may come into conflict with one another.

Bodily health may conflict with freedom. A person may wish to live in a way that involves health risks. Integrity may conflict with the need for protection. Affiliation may conflict with privacy. Economic limits may restrict opportunities for continuity and individual adaptation.

Nussbaum’s list does not always provide a simple answer.

That does not make it useless. On the contrary, it allows us to see what is actually at stake.

When a service restricts a person’s freedom for the sake of health, both values must be made visible. When housing is organised efficiently but residents’ privacy is weakened, the loss of integrity must be described as a real loss.

Without such a language, administrative considerations may appear neutral and inevitable.

Justice requires that what is lost also be given a name.

The Concrete Face

What should a human being be able to do and to be?

It may be tempting to answer with large words: to live freely, develop, participate, and be respected.

Nussbaum’s contribution is to make the words more concrete.

To live freely may mean being able to decide who enters one’s home.

To participate may mean receiving information in a language one understands.

To have bodily integrity may mean that someone knocks before entering.

To have affiliation may mean being allowed to keep a helper one has learned to trust.

To exercise practical reason may mean that a refusal is given time to be heard.

To have the capability for play may mean that not every activity must have a therapeutic goal.

Justice reveals itself in such details.

It lives not only in constitutions and conventions, but in rooms, routines, conversations, and ways of touching another human being.

The concrete face of justice is the face of the person asking to have control over their own life.

A Society Judged from Below

Nussbaum’s theory invites us to judge society from below.

Not first from the perspective of the strong, efficient, and articulate citizen, but from the perspective of the person who encounters the greatest number of obstacles.

Can this person enter?

Can she understand?

Can he be heard?

Can the person form attachments, protect their body, use their senses, play, and influence their own daily life?

A society may appear free and just to those who fit comfortably within its institutions. The real test arises with those who need the institutions to change.

The person with the greatest need for adaptation reveals society’s hidden assumptions.

The staircase shows for whom the building was planned.

The difficult language shows for whom the information was written.

The rapid decision shows whom people expected to be able to keep up.

By looking from the margins, we rediscover the centre.

The Human Being as an End

Nussbaum’s theory rests on a simple but demanding conviction:

Every human being should be treated as an end, not merely as a means to the interests of others or to society’s production.

A person is not valuable because they contribute to economic growth. They are not valuable because they can defend their rights or repay care.

They are entitled to justice because theirs is a human life capable of experience, relationship, joy, and suffering.

This does not mean that every person can realise every capability in the same way. Body, health, and cognitive circumstances impose real limits.

But these limitations do not release society from asking what can be made possible.

Justice does not mean promising that everyone can become anything.

It means refusing to turn socially created barriers into individual destinies.

What Do We Owe One Another?

The question of what a human being should be able to do and to be leads to another question:

What do we owe one another?

Nussbaum’s answer is more extensive than a right to be left alone. We owe one another social conditions that make basic human capabilities real.

This means schools able to accommodate difference, accessible housing, services that support self-determination, and communities in which people can belong.

It also means a language that does not reduce human beings to burdens, diagnoses, or costs.

We owe one another the building of a world in which vulnerability does not lead to exclusion.

This obligation is not without limits. Society must prioritise, and not every wish can be fulfilled. But priorities must be made within an understanding of what a dignified human life requires.

The economy must serve human life.

Human life cannot merely be adapted to the economy.

The Concrete Face of Justice

Nussbaum’s philosophy does not provide a simple blueprint for the just society. It offers something else: a set of questions that can bring large principles closer to human life.

Not only: Does the person have a right?

But: Can the right be exercised?

Not only: Has the person received a service?

But: Which capability for living does the service create?

Not only: Has everyone been treated equally?

But: Do they have genuinely equal opportunities?

Not only: Is the person safe?

But: Do they also have freedom, affiliation, joy, and influence?

This is the concrete face of justice.

It is not an abstract ideal floating above everyday life. It meets us in the individual person’s body, home, relationships, and hopes.

And perhaps this is the most important lesson in Nussbaum:

A society is not just because it has formulated beautiful principles.

It is just to the extent that every person is actually given the opportunity to live.

To feel and think.

To form attachments.

To participate and withdraw.

To play, choose, and influence.

To be vulnerable without losing dignity.

The question is therefore not only what a human being can do through their own power.

The question is what we, through society and through our actions, make possible for one another. 


The question is therefore not only what a human being can do through their own power.

The question is what we, through society and through our actions, make possible for one another. 


This essay is written from my notes and many lectures on the subject for students i Social Work. It is developed though a conversation wit OpenAI/ChatGPT, which also made the illustration.