These capabilities come in three different varieties, those being: the “basic capabilities,” the “internal capabilities,” and the “combined capabilities.” The basic capabilities, as Nussbaum states, are “the innate equipment of individuals that is the necessary basis for developing the more advanced capability” (Nussbaum 219). Internal capabilities are those that fulfill the adult individuals’ needs to actually function in accordance to his capabilities. A great example Nussbaum uses is where women in different cultures at one time were being discriminated against in the form of taking away their capabilities of enjoying sexual intercourse, which then leads to never wanting sex, which ends in no reproduction. The last types of capabilities are those of, the combined sort. These are defined as “internal capabilities combined with suitable external conditions for the exercise of the function” (Nussbaum 219).
The specific examples in which she wrote of were the central human capabilities of: life, bodily health and integrity, bodily integrity, senses, imagination, thought, emotions, practical reason, affiliation, other species, play, and control over one’s environment: being both politically and materially. All of these are categorized into the three groups of capabilities listed in the above paragraph.
While I was reading this piece from Martha C. Nussbaum, I was intrigued to find out her beliefs were similar in many instances to those of Rawls’. The main belief they share is that of the individual in a society should be protected and preserved, and not the collective, if true justice were to reign. Also, I found it interesting that her many of her examples of hindrances of opportunities were those of women; this left me wondering if she was at all influenced by the feminist writer Elizabeth Cady Stanton. I do not think Nussbaum is a radical feminist by any means, but I think Nussbaum believes women, over the centuries, no matter the culture, have had it harder than men when discussing the hindrance of opportunities.
This reading was very interesting to me, in that it discussed justice in a whole new way; a way that I have never thought to look at justice before. I agree in that for justice to be fair, individuals need the opportunity to function. People of a society should never be hindered to act against or speak out about an issue, and should most defiantly not be hindered against having the chance-the “opportunity” to decided what they would like to do about an issue or idea, and they should also never be influenced or pressured into believing, thinking, speaking, or acting in a way that is not completely their own. In other words, I believe, just as Nussbaum, that no one else should have the right to force their ideas and beliefs on to another individual; because this would, once again steer them away from their own opportunity to make a decision to function.
Works Cited
Nussbaum, Martha C. "The Central Human Functional Capabilities." From "Sex and Social Justice." "A World of Ideas: Essential Readings for College Writers." Ed. Lee A. Jacobus. 7th ed. New York: Bedford/St. Martin's, 2006. pp 209-223.