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Diversity Reading List

Helping you include authors from under-represented groups in your teaching

Reproducing Persons: Issues in Feminist Bioethics

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: Controversies about abortion and women’s reproductive technologies often seem to reflect personal experience, religious commitment, or emotional response. Laura M. Purdy believes, however, that coherent ethical principles are implicit in these controversies and that feminist bioethics can help clarify the conflicts of interest which often figure in human reproduction. As she defines the underlying issues, Purdy emphasizes the importance of taking women’s interests fully into account. Reproducing Persons first explores the rights and duties connected with conception and pregnancy. Purdy asks whether conceiving a child or taking a pregnancy to term can ever be morally wrong. She challenges the thinking of those who feel the prospect of disability or serious genetic disease should not constrain conception or justify abortion. The essays next look at abortion from a variety of angles. One contends that killing fetuses is not murder; others emphasize the moral importance of access to abortion. Purdy considers the conflicting interests of women and men regarding abortion, and argues against requiring a husband’s consent. The book concludes with a consideration of new reproductive technologies and arrangements, including the controversial issue of surrogacy, or contract pregnancy. Throughout, Purdy combines traditional utilitarianism with some of the most powerful insights of contemporary feminist ethics. Her provocative essays create guidelines for approaching new topics and inspire fresh thinking about old ones.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Law and Public PolicyTagged bioethics, feminism, utilitarianismLeave a comment

Forty acres and a mule’ for women: Rawls and feminism

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: This article assesses the development of Rawls’s thinking in response to a generation of feminist critique. Two principle criticisms are sustainable throughout his work: first, that the family, as a basic institution of society, must be subject to the principles of justice if its members are to be free and equal members of society; and, second, that without such social and political equality, justice as fairness is as meaningful to women as the unrealized promise of ‘Forty acres and a mule’ was to the newly freed slaves.

Posted in Equality, Freedom and Rights, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public Policy, RaceTagged feminist ethics, John Rawls, slavery, social and political philosophy, social contractLeave a comment

John Macmurray’s Religious Philosophy: What It Means to Be a Person

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: Recent dissatisfaction with individualism and the problems of religious pluralism make this an opportune time to reassess the way in which we define ourselves and conduct our relationships with others. The philosophical writings of John Macmurray are a useful resource for performing this examination, and recent interest in Macmurray’s work has been growing steadily.
A full-scale critical examination of Macmurray’s religious philosophy has not been published and this work fills this gap, sharing his insistence that we define ourselves through action and through person-to-person relationships, while critiquing his account of the ensuing political and religious issues. The key themes in this work are the concept of the person and the ethics of personal relations.

Posted in Personal and Social Identity, Religious Development, Experience, and PersonhoodTagged agency, identity, John Macmurray, personhood, religionLeave a comment

Relational Autonomy: Feminist Perspectives on Automony, Agency, and the Social Self

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: This collection of original essays explores the social and relational dimensions of individual autonomy. Rejecting the feminist charge that autonomy is inherently masculinist, the contributors draw on feminist critiques of autonomy to challenge and enrich contemporary philosophical debates about agency, identity, and moral responsibility. The essays analyze the complex ways in which oppression can impair an agent’s capacity for autonomy, and investigate connections, neglected by standard accounts, between autonomy and other aspects of the agent, including self-conception, self-worth, memory, and the imagination.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Law and Public Policy, Life Sciences, Personal and Social IdentityTagged agency, autonomy, feminist theoryLeave a comment

Toleration in the Abortion Debate

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: What methods, what strategies, is it defensible for us to employ when campaigning on a contentious moral issue? What kinds of intolerance may we legitimately manifest towards the opposition in our endeavour to win converts and influence opinion? Could we be justified in refusing on principle even to engage with the opposition in public debate? And what of the legitimacy of ‘playing’ on people’s emotions, or of not correcting misinformation put about by some of our supporters which helps our cause? Or, in making use of premises in argument that our opponents accept but we do not or, of appealing to arguments that we know to be invalid but by which the opposition may be taken in?

Posted in Culture, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Law and Public Policy, Metaethics, Normative EthicsTagged abortion, conscientious objection, moral matter, permissive policy, public debateLeave a comment

Ethics: A Feminist Reader

Posted on January 20, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Book synopsis: The feminist movement has challenged many of the unstated assumptions on which ethics as a branch of philosophy has always rested – assumptions about human nature, moral agency, citizenship and kinship. The twenty-six readings in this book express the discontent of a succession of fiercely articulate women writers, from Mary Wollstonecraft to the present day, with the masculine bias of `morality’. The editors have contributed an overall introduction, which discusses ethics, feminism and feminist themes in ethics, and have provided introductions to each of the readings, designed to situate in their historical and intellectual context. They have also compiled two lists for further reading: `Ethics: a Feminist Bibliography’ and `The Male Tradition’. Ethics: A Feminist Reader is an essential resource for students and teachers of philosophy, political theory and women’s studies. For anyone with a stake in progressive sexual politics it is an inspirational guide.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Metaethics, Normative EthicsTagged feminist ethics, social ethicsLeave a comment

Feminism and Metaethics

Posted on January 14, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: Feminism is first and foremost a political project: a project aimed at the liberation of women and the destruction of patriarchy. This project does not have a particular metaethics; there is no feminist consensus, for example, on the epistemology of moral belief or the metaphysics of moral truth. But the work of feminist philosophers – that is, philosophers who identify with the political project of feminism, and moreover see that political project as informing their philosophical work – raises significant metaethical questions: about the need to rehabilitate traditional moral philosophy, about the extent to which political and moral considerations can play a role in philosophical theorizing, and about the importance of rival metaethical conceptions for first-order political practice. I discuss some of the contributions that feminist philosophy makes to each of these questions in turn. I hope to call attention to the way in which feminist thought bears on traditional topics in metaethics (particularly moral epistemology and ethical methodology) but also to how feminist thought might inform metaethical practice itself.

Posted in Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, MetaethicsTagged feminist ethics, feminist philosophy, metaethicsLeave a comment

Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny

Posted on July 1, 2019December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: Down Girl is a broad, original, and far ranging analysis of what misogyny really is, how it works, its purpose, and how to fight it. The philosopher Kate Manne argues that modern society’s failure to recognize women’s full humanity and autonomy is not actually the problem. She argues instead that it is women’s manifestations of human capacities – autonomy, agency, political engagement – is what engenders misogynist hostility.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Gender, Sex, and SexualityTagged ethics, feminism, misogynyLeave a comment

Feminist Perspectives on Sex and Gender

Posted on August 20, 2018December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Introduction: Feminism is the movement to end women’s oppression. One possible way to understand ‘woman’ in this claim is to take it as a sex term: ‘woman’ picks out human females and being a human female depends on various anatomical features (like genitalia). Historically many feminists have understood ‘woman’ differently: not as a sex term, but as a gender term that depends on social and cultural factors (like social position). In so doing, they distinguished sex (being female or male) from gender (being a woman or a man), although most ordinary language users appear to treat the two interchangeably. More recently this distinction has come under sustained attack and many view it nowadays with (at least some) suspicion. This entry (around 12 000 words in length) outlines and discusses distinctly feminist debates on sex and gender.

Posted in Culture, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Identity and Change, Ontology and Metaontology, Personal and Social IdentityTagged feminist metaphysics, gender nominalism, philosophy of gender, philosophy of sex, social constructivismLeave a comment

A Woman Who Defends All the Persons of Her Sex: Selected Philosophical and Moral Writings

Posted on June 1, 2018December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Publisher’s Note: During the oppressive reign of Louis XIV, Gabrielle Suchon (1632-1703) was the most forceful female voice in France, advocating women’s freedom and self-determination, access to knowledge, and assertion of authority. This volume collects Suchon’s writing from two works – Treatise on Ethics and Politics (1693) and On the Celibate Life Freely Chosen; or, Life without Commitments (1700) – and demonstrates her to be an original philosophical and moral thinker and writer. Suchon argues that both women and men have inherently similar intellectual, corporeal, and spiritual capacities, which entitle them equally to essentially human prerogatives, and she displays her breadth of knowledge as she harnesses evidence from biblical, classical, patristic, and contemporary secular sources to bolster her claim. Forgotten over the centuries, these writings have been gaining increasing attention from feminist historians, students of philosophy, and scholars of seventeenth-century French literature and culture. This translation, from Domna C. Stanton and Rebecca M. Wilkin, marks the first time these works will appear in English.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Education, Equality, Freedom and Rights, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Law and Public PolicyTagged celibacy, ethics, politics, womenLeave a comment

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