The virtue of feminist rationality
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The virtue of feminist rationality
(Continuum studies in philosophy)
Continuum, c2012
- : hardcover
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [197]-204) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Feminist philosophers have been some of the most vocal critics of reason and rationality. While most feminists realize that rationality is a concept that cannot be entirely abandoned, few have considered how to construct a positive account of rationality. This book represents a sustained argument for a feminist theory of rationality. It opens by asking the question: is reason inherently masculine? Deborah K. Heikes goes on to answer this question negatively and to examine what feminists actually want from a theory of rationality, specifying what a virtue theory of rationality is and how it works. She identifies those features that feminists believe are central to reason, identifying four dichotomies that are central to feminist thinking (mind/body, reason/emotion, identity/difference, objectivity/subjectivity),and argues that they can be captured by conceiving of rationality as a virtue concept. She further demonstrates how a specifically feminist theory of rationality can provide objective grounds for feminists' moral, political and epistemic agendas.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. The 'Maleness' of Reason
- 2. Rationality and Reasonableness
- 3. Mind v. Body
- 4. Reason v. Emotion
- 5. Identity v. Difference
- 6. Objectivity v. Subjectivity
- 7. Reasonableness: The Once and Future Queen, Should Feminists Be Rational
- Bibliography
- Index.
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