
Contents
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I. The Classical Feminist Project I. The Classical Feminist Project
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II. The Different Voice Project II. The Different Voice Project
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III. The Strong Critical Project III. The Strong Critical Project
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1. Gender as Symbolic 1. Gender as Symbolic
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2. Gender as Psychosocial 2. Gender as Psychosocial
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3. Gender as Relational 3. Gender as Relational
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4. Norms of Rationality and Norms of Credibility 4. Norms of Rationality and Norms of Credibility
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16 Gender and Rationality
Get accessKaren Jones is Lecturer in Philosophy at the University of Melbourne. She has held positions at Cornell University and at the Research School of Social Sciences, the Australian National University. She has written extensively on trust in both its epistemic and ethical dimensions. Much of her work is from a feminist perspective.
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Published:02 September 2009
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Abstract
This article explores feminist stances toward gender and rationality. These divide into three broad camps: the “classical feminist” stance, according to which what needs to be challenged are not available norms and ideals of rationality, but rather the supposition that women are unable to meet them; the “different voice” stance, which challenges available norms of rationality as either incomplete or accorded an inflated importance; and the “strong critical” stance, which finds fault with the norms and ideals themselves. This contribution focuses on assessing the various projects—some rival, some complementary—being pursued within the third, critical camp. This article offers a reconstruction of Catherine MacKinnon's critique of norms of rationality according to which they function to maintain relations of dominance by deauthorizing feminist claims to knowledge.
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