Banno
People with disabilities may not be free or independent; and those with severe mental disabilities may be unequal. Nussbaum argues that such people should nevertheless be considered full citizens entitled to dignified lives, even if no one could gain from cooperating with them. She notes that the social contract tradition has always denied the reality of dependency, despite the obvious fact that everyone is dependent on others during infancy, old age, injury, and illness. Historically women have done most of the largely unpaid work of caring for dependents, so by ignoring women, the social contract theorists conveniently evaded the thorny issue of justice for dependents and caregivers. Nussbaum argues that justice for people with disabilities should include whatever special arrangements are required for them to lead a dignified life, and the work of caring for them should be socially recognized, fairly distributed, and fairly compensated. — Jean Chambers
Moliere
Why not just that some folk dance on their legs, others in their chair?
Note that this removes the impairment? — Banno
frank
Hanover
Hanover
DO you find it interesting how ubiquitous and indelible the idea of deficit is? — Banno
frank
L'éléphant
Is there a defensibly “normal” human body? — Banno
Banno
SO a statistical average? And that provides an ought here?The study of human anatomy is where to start. — L'éléphant
frank
Was his request unreasonable? — Banno
He saved staff time by improving communication at the shift change — Banno
L'éléphant
Pardon me, but I didn't think you meant morally when you asked that question.SO a statistical average? And that provides an ought here?
Are you sure that's a good argument? How do we go from "you don't have a hand" to "You ought have a hand"? — Banno
Banno
The presumption that a disability is a deficit does exactly that, no? Perhaps not moral - although there are those who say disability is caused by the sins of the parents - but it's at least evaluative. This is the experience of folk with disabilities.Pardon me, but I didn't think you meant morally when you asked that question. — L'éléphant
Banno
Two things. Why should it be you making that judgement rather than him? For you to decide that him getting in a mess is OK? And what hospital is this, so I can avoid it. Sounds like the staff morale is shite....but I think he'd be able to eat, though he might end up with mashed potatoes on his hands. — frank
Jamal
So it’s not their body that is disabling so much as its interaction with its environment. — Banno
the social model; the view that disability is largely created by architectural barriers, institutional practices, and social attitudes that fail to accommodate human variation. — Banno
That rather than being inherently negative, having a disability is just one more way of being a human, not inherently a disadvantage or a negative, but treated as such by many in the community. — Banno
Jamal
But I don't think this is a "social construct" model. The latter is too ontologically dualist, whereas this view is relational. So maybe it fits disability. — Jamal
Banno
frank
Seems simple enough. For the staff, one grumpy patient. For the man, yet another trip to an unfamiliar space full of people who will not listen. The cumulative effect of emotional micro trauma, of having to repeat the same thing over an over. It's a common grievance for folk with disabilities. — Banno
Banno
Banno
Moliere
Is medical disease also a social construct? If not, how do we draw the line between social construction and empirical fact? — Joshs
Moliere
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