Volume 28, 2024
Thomas E. Wartenberg

Pages 71-89
https://doi.org/10.5840/filmphil202310926
Murdoch's Caring Gaze and "My Octopus Teacher"
In her essay ¡°The Idea of Perfection,¡± Iris Murdoch argues that sustained attention directed towards another can result in a person¡¯s moral improvement by getting them to have a more accurate view of the other. In this essay, I argue that the award-winning film My Octopus Teacher illustrates Murdoch¡¯s view and corrects some of its shortcomings. It illustrates Murdoch¡¯s claim by showing how one of the filmmaker¡¯s sustained attention directed at an octopus results not only in an alternation in the filmmaker¡¯s view of the cephalopod but also transforms his life by making him more open to others. Because the central relationship in the film is one between a human being and a cephalopod, the film also corrects the anthropocentric bias in Murdoch¡¯s account by showing that a human being can have a transformative relationship with a creature as alien appearing as an octopus.