Difference between revisions of "MAR 21"

From Alfino
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Created page with "==16. MAR 21== ===Assigned Work (Heavy Reading Day)=== :*Rachel Lauden, ''Cuisine and Empire'' Introduction and Chapter 6, "Christian Cuisine" :*Watch Mother Noella segment...")
 
m
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
==16. MAR 21==
+
==18: MAR 21. ==
  
===Assigned Work (Heavy Reading Day)===
+
===Assigned===
  
:*Rachel Lauden, ''Cuisine and Empire'' Introduction and Chapter 6, "Christian Cuisine"
+
:*Introduction to Capabilities Approach [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hZgsFd-huFw], Sabine Alkire [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabina_Alkire]
:*Watch Mother Noella segment from Pollan's "Cooked" series (video file in Shared folder)
+
:*Read, Martha Nussbaum, C2, The Central Capabilities (17-45; 28)
  
===In-Class===
+
===In-class===
  
:*Minor point from Grocery store discussion -- Following the "logic of the grocery store", what do you think the next big change in food retail is? 
+
:*"From Partiality to Justice - Justice in an Evolutionary Context"
:*What is your culinary cosmos?  (Notes from C1 of Lauden.) [https://wiki.gonzaga.edu/alfino/index.php/Philosophy_of_Food_Fall_2020_Class_Notes_and_Reading_Schedule#Lauden.2C_Rachel.2C_.22Intro.22_and_C1.2C_.22Mastering_Grain_Cookery.22]
+
:*"How cultures commit impersonal or structural injustice."
:*Context for Christian cuisine: Biblical vegetarianism.  The three plates of the Judaic food convenant. [https://wiki.gonzaga.edu/alfino/index.php/Philosophy_of_Food_Fall_2018_Class_Notes#Soler.2C_Jean._.22The_Semiotics_of_Food_in_the_Bible.22]
+
:*A continuum of justice positions (good for thinking about PP1!)
:*Rachel Lauden, ''Cuisine and Empire'' Introduction and Chapter 1, "Mastering Grain Cookery, 20,000 to 300 bce", p. 1-55  (54)[https://wiki.gonzaga.edu/alfino/index.php/Philosophy_of_Food_Fall_2020_Class_Notes_and_Reading_Schedule#Lauden.2C_Rachel.2C_.22Intro.22_and_C1.2C_.22Mastering_Grain_Cookery.22]
 
  
===Mother Noella Cheese Segment from "Cooked"===
+
===Small Group Discussion: Is there a limit to kin partiality?===
  
:*Story Mother Noella and the appreciation of creation through cheese. The bacteria come from the earth, from death, and hold the promise of nourishing life!  A good example of culinary cosmos thinking.
+
:*One way to promote altruism is Dillion’s strategy - give your money and maybe a kidneyBut another way to assess altruism is at critical junctures in your life, such as between generations.   
:*Story of the wooden cheese vat. Background on dangers of pre-industrial milk and cheese processing. She switches to steel barrel and gets ecoli bacteriaExperiment.  ''Lactobacillus'' in the wood digest lactose in milk, turns to lactic acid which kills the ''ecoli'' bacteria.  Health inspectors relent.
 
:*Loss with "blank slate" processing.  Less diversity of bacteria, less diversity of flavor.
 
:*[US limits importation of soft cheeses, like soft Percorino.]
 
:*US approach - lowest quality milk goes into industrial cheese making.
 
:*Handling of cheese during fermentation determines flavor profiles and texture. "Feet of God"
 
:*Mother Noella at 17:30. Death and the promise of life.  Resurrection.
 
:*Connection between cheese ecology and other ecologies like fields to forests.
 
:*War and peace on the cheese rind!
 
  
===Rachel Lauden, ''Cuisine and Empire'' Introduction and Chapter 6, "Christian Cuisine"===
+
:*Imagine three futures for yourself.  In all of them, you grow up to have a successful career, a family with two kids, and a medium size extended family.  You are approaching retirement and your retirement and estate planning recalls a distant memory of an ethics class which talked about "justified partiality." You and your partner are wondering if you should leave all of your estate to your children or not.  Remember, you will have access to this money until you die, so you could cover end of life care for yourself and your partner.  Consider these three scenarios:
  
:*'''100-400 c.e.''' --
+
::*A. You and your partner retire with about 1 million dollars, a paid off house, and good health insurance.
::*Early Christian "communions" were simple communal meals, often in homes. Not unique to small sects.  Separation of food rituals from Romans - don't eat meat sacrificed to Rome.
+
::*B. You have all of the conditions in A, but 2 million dollars in net worth.
::*Bread as metaphor for Christian community (read p. 168). 
+
::*C. Same as B, but 8 million dollars.
::*Separation from Judaic food rituals - blood not prohibited, pork ok.  Focus on humble low meat cuisines.  Meat as luxury. Avoid alcohol and sweets.  Fasts on Wednesday and Friday.  Ascetic communities tried raw food diets.  Cooking thought to be connected to passions.  Early Christian take on some elements of Stoic thought, also about food.
 
::*Garum, a fish sauce prized in Roman times, prohibited as it was thought to change cold and wet humors of fish to hot and dry, stimulating passions.
 
  
:*'''350-1450 c.e.''' --
+
:*For all three scenarios, assume that all indications suggest continued growth of your assetsYou are also "aging well"!
::*Constantine's toleration of Christianity in 313. Shift to Constantinople and Byzantine Church as Western Empire falls apart.  Christianity becomes official religion of Eastern empire.  Byzantine court cuisine closer to Hellenistic cuisine of Eastern empire. 
 
::*Laws ending sacrifice.
 
::*No meat or dairy on half the days of the year.  Influence of Galen's "Humoral eating theory"
 
::*Expansion of Christianity into slavic landsInteresting note on apparent "summit" in Kiev
 
  
:*'''1100-1500 c.e.''' --
+
:*In your group discussion, pretend you are actually making this estate planning decisionWould you give 100% of your estate to your kids and relatives in each scenario?  What considerations come into the discussion? (Note: you could continue the options by imagining an estate with larger value - 16 million -- 16 billion.)
::*Increase in wealth in Europe led to pan-European Catholic high cuisine. Nobility of Europe increasing an intermarried network.  Nobles travelled with cooks and cookbooks.  Catholic monastic orders like Cistercians operated across Europe, maintained food and culinary traditions of Catholic cuisine.   
 
::*Theory of Christian culinary cosmos developed as reconquest of Arab domination of Europe led to recovery of Galen and theory of humoral eating. Also, Islamic cuisine influences: sugar, marzipan, almonds, eggplant (caponata), oranges "syrup," "sherbert," "candy" have arabic derivations.  Disgression on the famous "La Pasticceria Maria Grammatico, Erice, Sicily" [https://www.italymagazine.com/featured-story/story-maria-grammatico-and-her-famous-pasticceria-sicily]
 
::*Odd feature of high Catholic cuisine - use of disguise and fantasy.  Sieves molds to shape foods into other shapes Read at 179.  Development of sauces using blood distinguished Catholic cuisine from islamic and jewish. Meanwhile, humble cuisines varied by region and available grains, meats from small animals and birds more than cows and pigs. 
 
::*Technology - Promoted also by monasteries, mills became more prevalent.  Big change in household food labor equation: An hour on the "rotary quern" a day for a family of five.  Salted and dried fish (cod) come in from the north.  (Still common in European food stores, not so much American.) [https://www.google.com/search?q=rotary+quern+images&rlz=1C1GCEA_enUS860US860&oq=rotary+quern+images&aqs=chrome..69i57.3473j0j7&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8 Rotary Quern images]
 
  
:*'''1450-1650 c.e.''' -- Global Expansion of Catholic Cuisine, esp of Iberian Peninsula.
+
:*[https://www.stlouisfed.org/publications/regional-economist/second-quarter-2019/wealth-retired-households Data on household net worth at retirement]
::*[Side note on Alfred Crosby, ''The Columbian Exchange'' [https://www.amazon.com/Columbian-Exchange-Biological-Consequences-Anniversary/dp/0275980928/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=the+columbian+exchange&qid=1647884833&sprefix=Th+columbian+exc%2Caps%2C230&sr=8-1]
 
::*Spanish and Portuguese exploration and conquest: Cuba, Mexico, Aztecs, Phillipines.  Jesuits to the East: Goa, China, Japan.
 
::*Early global food industries run by Jesuits and order of nuns.  Jesuits: sugar, cacao, and mate' from Americas.  Nuns operated plantations in Peru, Mexico, Manilla, Macao, Guatemala, ...
 
::*Jesuits operated major cacao plantations in Guatemala and the Amazon, shipping to their operations in Spain, Italy, and S.E. Asia. Played a major role in the technology transfer of chocolate making to Europe. 
 
::*European encounter with first peoples and religions of Americas sharpened differences of culinary cosmos. Some human sacrifice, unfamiliar foods: insects, bats, spikers, worms...
 
::Catholics in Asia - Jesuits in Goa, India.  More exchange, intermarriage, curries and sauces,
 
::Importance of technology: Story of Maize processing. Mesoamericans understood how to treat maize with alkali (nixtamalization).  Brings out vitamins like B3.  Lack of this technology in southern Italy and the American south led to pellagra outbreaks (lack of B3).
 
  
:*'''1650 and beyond'''  
+
===From Partiality to Justice - Justice in an Evolutionary Context===
::*Emergence of Modern cuisines as European nobility decline, Protestantism changes view of culinary cosmos.
+
 
 +
:*'''A basic definition of Justice''':  Matters of justice concern expectations that can be the basis of a claim by others upon us.
 +
 
 +
:*Traditional Examples: equal treatment under the law, protection of rights, non-discrimination.  Note that these are largely formal commitments, not commitments to material goods. 
 +
 
 +
:*More recently argued: disaster relief, health care, care for people with disabilities, early childhood care, guaranteed basic income. 
 +
 
 +
:*You can also make a claim of injustice against someone who defames you or cheats you on a contract. This might be a civil claim rather than a criminal complaint.
 +
 
 +
:*Approaching justice in an evolutionary ethics context: We are by nature partial to ourselves, our kin, and intimates and friends.  They benefit and support us in many ways.  This is your personal preference network (PPN). You don't really need to justify your partiality to your PPN.  It follows that you should use your resources to support your PPN.  But you might have good reasons (self-interested or duty based) to '''allow claims of justice''' that will cost you resources (usually in the form of taxation).  Here's a short list:
 +
::*A criminal justice system to protect rights and enforce the law.
 +
::*A system of education.
 +
::*A social safety net (disaster relief, but maybe also disability insurance, health care, early childhood care)
 +
::*A duty to promote "material rights," not just formal rights (freedoms that require resources, as in capability theory).
 +
::*A duty to prevent loss of human dignity
 +
 
 +
:*Some quick information on the "cost" of different theories of justice.
 +
 
 +
===How Cultures commit "impersonal or structural injustice"===
 +
 
 +
:*Our discussion of PPNs (personal preference networks) like the Alumni Association might help us think about another category of injustice, one supported by cultural processes.
 +
:*Main Claim: Cultures allow humans to "normalize" claims that legitimate conduct not perceived as unjust, but later determined to be unjust.
 +
 
 +
:*Think of examples of cultural ideas related to justice that were considered normal, but have since been shown to be incorrect:
 +
 
 +
::*Some races are superior to others.
 +
::*Some cultures are superior to others.
 +
::*Race is not just a political category, but biologically real.
 +
::*The US can't compete at soccer. Well...
 +
::*Women can't do math and science.
 +
::*Women shouldn't do strenuous exercise.  Etc....
 +
 
 +
:*What's interesting about "cultural impersonal injustice" is that it involves a "normalization" a set of beliefs that support practices that, from hindsight, we don't just say that we have different beliefs, but that our predecessors were mistaken.  (Something we wouldn't say, for example, about other cultural beliefs, like attractive clothing styles or art.)
 +
 
 +
:*An obvious example for US culture would be structural injustice against ethnic minorities that experience discrimination.  If you are a formal rights theorist about justice, you might overlook or minimize the impacts on opportunity and success that come from “impersonal injustice”.  Maybe an easier example to see this comes from Italian culture and the “problem of the south”.  Overview of Italian attitudes toward the south, which still experiences lower socio-economic success.  Northern Italians still normalize attitudes toward southerners that we now explain through culture and history. This allows them to explain lower SES in Sicily as a condition that contemporary Sicilians are responsible for.  Likewise, we may underestimate the effect of disruptions of culture that come from slavery and discrimination in US history.
 +
 
 +
:*Now we have better ways of understanding different outcomes for culturally distinct groups. Compare for example Sicilian cultural experience and the cultural disruption that comes from slavery and discrimination.
 +
 
 +
===Martha Nussbaum, C2, The Central Capabilities===
 +
 
 +
:*note on the references to Vasanti from the previous chapter.
 +
 
 +
:*Capabilities Theory - approach to social justice that focuses on what people in a society can do or be.  (This a short of material freedom - Sen's major work was Development as Freedom.  Note how a development economist looks at things.) Rather than thinking about justice as fairness in the distribution of economic goods, capabilities theory sees the measure of social justice in a society in terms of how well they support basic human capabilities.
 +
 
 +
:*20: Capabilities are kinds of freedoms. They are both internal and external.  (Example: Internal: Ability to ride a bike vs. External: having a bike and a place to ride it. "Combined capabilities" are both internal and external.
 +
 
 +
:*People don't only deserve to have their capabilities realized if they are smart or can afford it.  Capabilities theory takes in the range of "innate capabilities" that people have, including cognitive and other disabilities. 
 +
 
 +
:*Capabilities theory isn't about "making" people function, but rather about giving people real options.  A real option includes both the internal and external conditions for the capabilities.
 +
 
 +
:*26: problem of how to treat "options" that people might choose that damage their own capabilities: risky sports, drugs, selling organs. 
 +
 
 +
:*29: Nussbaum adds a duty of dignity to the theory.  This might help justify restricting options that are self-abasing (allowing oneself to be servile or live in squalor). With treatment of animals it might eliminate breeding of dogs against health, or banning cock fights or dog racing.
 +
 
 +
:*33: The List -- Health, Safety, Education, Social connection, Absence of fear or stress (note upcoming Sapolsky chapter on Stress and SES), Affiliation, recreation, autonomy. 
 +
::*Note how abstract this list is, but also how it would allow a social justice critique that wouldn't just be about income transfer (Rawls).

Latest revision as of 17:49, 21 March 2024

18: MAR 21.

Assigned

  • Introduction to Capabilities Approach [1], Sabine Alkire [2]
  • Read, Martha Nussbaum, C2, The Central Capabilities (17-45; 28)

In-class

  • "From Partiality to Justice - Justice in an Evolutionary Context"
  • "How cultures commit impersonal or structural injustice."
  • A continuum of justice positions (good for thinking about PP1!)

Small Group Discussion: Is there a limit to kin partiality?

  • One way to promote altruism is Dillion’s strategy - give your money and maybe a kidney. But another way to assess altruism is at critical junctures in your life, such as between generations.
  • Imagine three futures for yourself. In all of them, you grow up to have a successful career, a family with two kids, and a medium size extended family. You are approaching retirement and your retirement and estate planning recalls a distant memory of an ethics class which talked about "justified partiality." You and your partner are wondering if you should leave all of your estate to your children or not. Remember, you will have access to this money until you die, so you could cover end of life care for yourself and your partner. Consider these three scenarios:
  • A. You and your partner retire with about 1 million dollars, a paid off house, and good health insurance.
  • B. You have all of the conditions in A, but 2 million dollars in net worth.
  • C. Same as B, but 8 million dollars.
  • For all three scenarios, assume that all indications suggest continued growth of your assets. You are also "aging well"!
  • In your group discussion, pretend you are actually making this estate planning decision. Would you give 100% of your estate to your kids and relatives in each scenario? What considerations come into the discussion? (Note: you could continue the options by imagining an estate with larger value - 16 million -- 16 billion.)

From Partiality to Justice - Justice in an Evolutionary Context

  • A basic definition of Justice: Matters of justice concern expectations that can be the basis of a claim by others upon us.
  • Traditional Examples: equal treatment under the law, protection of rights, non-discrimination. Note that these are largely formal commitments, not commitments to material goods.
  • More recently argued: disaster relief, health care, care for people with disabilities, early childhood care, guaranteed basic income.
  • You can also make a claim of injustice against someone who defames you or cheats you on a contract. This might be a civil claim rather than a criminal complaint.
  • Approaching justice in an evolutionary ethics context: We are by nature partial to ourselves, our kin, and intimates and friends. They benefit and support us in many ways. This is your personal preference network (PPN). You don't really need to justify your partiality to your PPN. It follows that you should use your resources to support your PPN. But you might have good reasons (self-interested or duty based) to allow claims of justice that will cost you resources (usually in the form of taxation). Here's a short list:
  • A criminal justice system to protect rights and enforce the law.
  • A system of education.
  • A social safety net (disaster relief, but maybe also disability insurance, health care, early childhood care)
  • A duty to promote "material rights," not just formal rights (freedoms that require resources, as in capability theory).
  • A duty to prevent loss of human dignity
  • Some quick information on the "cost" of different theories of justice.

How Cultures commit "impersonal or structural injustice"

  • Our discussion of PPNs (personal preference networks) like the Alumni Association might help us think about another category of injustice, one supported by cultural processes.
  • Main Claim: Cultures allow humans to "normalize" claims that legitimate conduct not perceived as unjust, but later determined to be unjust.
  • Think of examples of cultural ideas related to justice that were considered normal, but have since been shown to be incorrect:
  • Some races are superior to others.
  • Some cultures are superior to others.
  • Race is not just a political category, but biologically real.
  • The US can't compete at soccer. Well...
  • Women can't do math and science.
  • Women shouldn't do strenuous exercise. Etc....
  • What's interesting about "cultural impersonal injustice" is that it involves a "normalization" a set of beliefs that support practices that, from hindsight, we don't just say that we have different beliefs, but that our predecessors were mistaken. (Something we wouldn't say, for example, about other cultural beliefs, like attractive clothing styles or art.)
  • An obvious example for US culture would be structural injustice against ethnic minorities that experience discrimination. If you are a formal rights theorist about justice, you might overlook or minimize the impacts on opportunity and success that come from “impersonal injustice”. Maybe an easier example to see this comes from Italian culture and the “problem of the south”. Overview of Italian attitudes toward the south, which still experiences lower socio-economic success. Northern Italians still normalize attitudes toward southerners that we now explain through culture and history. This allows them to explain lower SES in Sicily as a condition that contemporary Sicilians are responsible for. Likewise, we may underestimate the effect of disruptions of culture that come from slavery and discrimination in US history.
  • Now we have better ways of understanding different outcomes for culturally distinct groups. Compare for example Sicilian cultural experience and the cultural disruption that comes from slavery and discrimination.

Martha Nussbaum, C2, The Central Capabilities

  • note on the references to Vasanti from the previous chapter.
  • Capabilities Theory - approach to social justice that focuses on what people in a society can do or be. (This a short of material freedom - Sen's major work was Development as Freedom. Note how a development economist looks at things.) Rather than thinking about justice as fairness in the distribution of economic goods, capabilities theory sees the measure of social justice in a society in terms of how well they support basic human capabilities.
  • 20: Capabilities are kinds of freedoms. They are both internal and external. (Example: Internal: Ability to ride a bike vs. External: having a bike and a place to ride it. "Combined capabilities" are both internal and external.
  • People don't only deserve to have their capabilities realized if they are smart or can afford it. Capabilities theory takes in the range of "innate capabilities" that people have, including cognitive and other disabilities.
  • Capabilities theory isn't about "making" people function, but rather about giving people real options. A real option includes both the internal and external conditions for the capabilities.
  • 26: problem of how to treat "options" that people might choose that damage their own capabilities: risky sports, drugs, selling organs.
  • 29: Nussbaum adds a duty of dignity to the theory. This might help justify restricting options that are self-abasing (allowing oneself to be servile or live in squalor). With treatment of animals it might eliminate breeding of dogs against health, or banning cock fights or dog racing.
  • 33: The List -- Health, Safety, Education, Social connection, Absence of fear or stress (note upcoming Sapolsky chapter on Stress and SES), Affiliation, recreation, autonomy.
  • Note how abstract this list is, but also how it would allow a social justice critique that wouldn't just be about income transfer (Rawls).