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Diversity Reading List

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

Simone Weil on Labor and Spirit

Posted on October 20, 2023December 3, 2024 by Deryn Mair Thomas

This essay argues that Simone Weil appropriates Marx’s notion of labor as life activity in order to reposition work as the site of spirituality. Rather than locating spirituality in a religious tradition, doctrine, profession of faith, or in personal piety, Weil places it in the capacity to work. Spirit arises in the activity of living, and more specifically in laboring—in one’s engagement with materiality. Utilizing Marx’s distinction between living and dead labor, I show how Weil develops a critique of capital as a “force” that disrupts the individual’s relation to her own work by reducing it to the mere activity of calculable “production.” Capital reduces labor to an abstraction and thereby uproots human subjectivity, on a systemic scale, from its connection to living praxis, or what Weil calls spirituality. Life itself is exchanged for a simulacrum of life. In positioning living labor as spiritual, Weil’s work offers a corrective to these deadening practices.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Political Economy, Religious Development, Experience, and Personhood, Work, Labor, and LeisureTagged immanence, labour, Marx, Simone Weil, spirituality, workLeave a comment

Is Meaningful Work Available to All People?

Posted on September 29, 2023December 3, 2024 by Deryn Mair Thomas

In light of the impact of work on human flourishing, an intractable problem for political theorists concerns the distribution of meaningful work in a community of moral equals. This article reviews a number of partial solutions that a well-ordered society could draw upon to provide equality of opportunity for eudemonistically meaningful work and to minimize the impact of bad work upon those who perform it. Even in view of these solutions, however, it is not likely that opportunities for meaningful work can be guaranteed for all people, which carries an implication that, even in well-ordered societies, it is likely that not all people will flourish. The author argues that the limitedness of meaningful work is not a reason to reject the normative claim that meaningful work is integral in flourishing, nor is it a reason against working to transform social and political institutions to increase opportunities for meaningful work.

Posted in Culture, Justice, Work, Labor, and LeisureTagged equality, labor, meaningful work, utopianismLeave a comment

Simone de Beauvoir and Hannah Arendt on Labor

Posted on September 29, 2023December 3, 2024 by Deryn Mair Thomas

Comparing the typologies of human activities developed by Beauvoir and Arendt, I argue that these philosophers share the same concept of labor as well as a similar insight that labor cannot provide a justification or evaluative measure for human life. But Beauvoir and Arendt think differently about work (as contrasted with labor), and Arendt alone illuminates the inability of constructive work to provide non-utilitarian value for human existence. Beauvoir, on the other hand, exceeds Arendt in examining the ethical implications of our existential need for a plurality of free peers in a public realm.

Posted in Culture, Work, Labor, and LeisureTagged Hannah Arendt, labor, Marx, Simone de Beauvoir, transcendence, workLeave a comment

The Sisyphean Torture of Housework: Simone de Beauvoir and Inequitable Divisions of Domestic Work in Marriage

Posted on September 29, 2023December 3, 2024 by Deryn Mair Thomas

This paper examines Simone de Beauvoir’s account of marriage in The Second Sex and argues that Beauvoir’s dichotomy between transcendence and immanence can provide an illuminating critique of continuing gender inequities in marriage and divisions of domestic work. Beauvoir’s existentialist ethics not only establishes a moral wrong in marriages in which wives perform the second shift of household labor but also supports the need to transform existing normative expectations surrounding wives and domestic work.

Posted in Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Work, Labor, and LeisureTagged domestic labor, gender inequity, housework, marriage, Simone de BeauvoirLeave a comment

Civic Education and Social Diversity

Posted on September 29, 2023December 3, 2024 by Deryn Mair Thomas

How can civic education in a liberal democracy give social diversity its due? Two complementary concerns have informed a lot of liberal thinking on this subject. Liberals like John Stuart Mill worry that “the plea of liberty” by parents not block “the fulfillment by the State of its duties” to children. They also worry that civic education not be conceived or conducted in such a way as to stifle “diversity in opinions and modes of conduct.”‘ Some prominent contemporary theorists add a new and interesting twist to these common–concerns. They criticize liberals like Mill and Kant for contributing to one of the central problems, the stifling of social diversity, that they are trying to resolve. The comprehensive liberal aim of educating children not only for citizenship but also for individuality or autonomy, these political liberals argue, does not leave enough room for social diversity. Would a civic educational program consistent with political liberalism accommodate significantly more social diversity than one guided by comprehensive liberalism?
Political liberals claim that it would, and some recommend political liberalism to us largely on this basis. This article shows that political liberalism need not, and often does not, accommodate more social diversity through its civic educational program than comprehensive liberalism.

Posted in Culture, Education, Forms of Government, Law and Public PolicyTagged civic education, civic virtues, Mill, political liberalism, Rawls, social diversityLeave a comment

The Wrong of Rudeness: Learning Modern Civility From Ancient Chinese Philosophy

Posted on September 29, 2023December 3, 2024 by Deryn Mair Thomas

Being rude is often more gratifying and enjoyable than being polite. Likewise, rudeness can be a more accurate and powerful reflection of how I feel and think. This is especially true in a political environment that can make being polite seem foolish or naive. Civility and ordinary politeness are linked both to big values, such as respect and consideration, and to the fundamentally social nature of human beings. This book explores the powerful temptations to incivility and rudeness, but argues that they should generally be resisted. Drawing on early Chinese philosophers who lived during great political turmoil but nonetheless sought to “mind their manners,” it articulates a way of thinking about politeness that is distinctively social. It takes as a given that we can feel profoundly alienated from others, and that other people can sometimes be truly terrible. Yet because we are social neglecting the social and political courtesies comes at great cost. The book considers not simply why civility and politeness are important, but how. It addresses how small insults can damage social relations, how separation of people into tribes undermines our better interests, and explores how bodily and facial expressions can influence how life with other people goes. It is especially geared toward anyone who feels the temptation of being rude and wishes it were easier to feel otherwise. It seeks to answer a question of great contemporary urgency: When so much of public and social life with others is painful and fractious, why should I be polite?

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Normative Ethics, Personal and Social IdentityTagged Chinese philosophy, civility, Confucian Philosophy, Courtesy, Moral CharacterLeave a comment

The Right to Explanation

Posted on September 29, 2023December 3, 2024 by Deryn Mair Thomas

This article argues for a right to explanation, on the basis of its necessity to protect the interest in what I call informed self- advocacy from the serious threat of opacity. The argument for the right to explanation proceeds along the lines set out by an interest- based account of rights (Section II). Section III presents and motivates the moral importance of informed self- advocacy in hierarchical, non- voluntary institutions. Section IV argues for a right to so- called rule- based normative and causal explanations, on the basis of their necessity to protect that interest. Section V argues that this protection comes at a tolerable cost.

Posted in Freedom and Rights, Technology and Material CultureTagged algorithmic ethics, algorithms, explanation, rights, technological ethicsLeave a comment

Reflections on the Right Use of School Studies With a View to the Love of God (1950)

Posted on July 17, 2023December 3, 2024 by Deryn Mair Thomas
Posted in Education, Ethics and Socio-Politics of ReligionTagged attention, contradiction, Philosophy of education, philosophy of religionLeave a comment

The Other Side of Agency

Posted on July 17, 2023December 3, 2024 by Deryn Mair Thomas

In our philosophical tradition and our wider culture, we tend to think of persons as agents. This agential conception is flattering, but in this paper I will argue that it conceals a more complex truth about what persons are. In 1. I set the issues in context. In 2. I critically explore four features commonly presented as fundamental to personhood in versions of the agential conception: action, capability, choice and independence. In 3. I argue that each of these agential features presupposes a non-agential feature: agency presupposes patiency, capability presupposes incapability, choice presupposes necessity and independence presupposes dependency. In 4. I argue that such non-agential features, as well as being implicit within the agential conception, are as apt to be constitutive of personhood as agential features, and in 5. I conclude.

Posted in Metaethics, Normative EthicsTagged agency, moral theory, patiency, personhood, philosophy of actionLeave a comment

The Need for Roots: Prelude to a Declaration of Duties Towards Mankind

Posted on July 13, 2023December 3, 2024 by Deryn Mair Thomas

In The Need for Roots, her most famous book, Weil reflects on the importance of religious and political social structures in the life of the individual. She wrote that one of the basic obligations we have as human beings is to not let another suffer from hunger. Equally as important, however, is our duty towards our community: we may have declared various human rights, but we have overlooked the obligations and this has left us self-righteous and rootless. Published posthumously, The Need for Roots was a direct result of Weil’s collaboration with Charles De Gaulle, where Weil set out to address the past and to propose a road map for the future of France after World War II. She painstakingly analyzes the spiritual and ethical milieu that led to France’s defeat by the German army, and then addresses these issues with the prospect of eventual French victory.

Posted in Culture, Freedom and Rights, Metaethics, Personal and Social Identity, Religious Development, Experience, and PersonhoodTagged belonging, community, cultural heritage, duties, human rightsLeave a comment

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