Students’ research. Justice and Citizen Empowerment in Plato’s Philosophy

Duration
1 July 2024 – 30 August 2024
Participants
Tija Guvaitė

Project idea

The importance of this topic stems from the recent scholarly debate on Martha Nussbaum's influential theory of justice and its origins. Nussbaum develops the capabilities approach using the assumptions of Aristotle's philosophy to argue that a just political order is the one that empowers each person to bring out his or her best potential. Recent research argues that such an egalitarian conception of distributive justice, which ensure the economic, social and political empowerment of different citizens, appears as early as Plato's “The Laws”, but this thesis remains controversial for now. The research problem has the following main objective: to analyse the position of women in Plato's "Laws" with respect to the theory of justice based on the capabilities approach, and to uncover to what extent and by what social, economic, legal and political means women are empowered to reach their best potential.