更多来自Judith Butler

Ideally, we lose ourselves in what we read only to return to ourselves transformed, and part of a more expansive world.

JB

Judith Butler

McGill University Honorary Doctorate Address 2013, 2013

2:52

视频从2:52开始——这句语录被说出的那一刻

这句语录背后的故事

Butler, one of the most influential philosophers of her generation, used her honorary doctorate address to mount a passionate defense of the humanities at a time when they were under increasing pressure to justify their existence in economic terms. 'Can we measure their impact, their output, their profits?' she asked, echoing the skeptics. Her answer was that the value of humanities education was precisely its immeasurability. Reading carefully across languages and cultural differences taught students to 'see beyond where we are, to find ourselves linked with others we have never directly known.' The transformation she described wasn't vocational training — it was the deepening of a person's capacity for empathy, critical thinking, and engagement with complexity. 'We cannot quantify such knowledge without losing the very value that such knowledge has for us.'

收藏你最喜欢的语录

保存激励你的语录。在Minditly中建立你的个人智慧合集——在两个平台都可用。