Prioritizing long-term financial self-sufficiency for both parties over short-term litigation victories or dependency arrangements.
Zera Yacob's reason-centered philosophy emphasizes human flourishing through capability and self-determination. Applied to divorce money matters, this suggests prioritizing arrangements that enable both parties' long-term economic independence rather than extracting maximum resources in settlement. This means considering education, career development, and skill-building as part of fair division—not merely dividing existing assets. A settlement that leaves one party permanently dependent, even if legally favorable, conflicts with Yacob's vision of dignified human life. This framework challenges both the person seeking extractive settlement terms and the person accepting dependent arrangements. True economic justice supports each individual becoming self-sufficient within realistic timeframes. This might mean investing settlement funds in education, deferring asset division to allow career development, or structuring support to decrease over time. This approach requires reasoning about long-term human flourishing rather than short-term financial advantage, reflecting Yacob's ethical commitment to genuine dignity through capability.
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