In contrast to many previous feminist interpretations of
Aristotle, which found much to disparage and little to salvage in
his philosophy, the contributors to this volume enter into new,
creative, and subtle dimensions of inquiry about Aristotle. They
look more deeply into his influence and question the possibility of
escape from it.
Feminists recognize that they too philosophize within the
tradition founded by Plato and Aristotle and owe the Greeks a debt.
Aristotle still influences our abstract thinking, search for
principles, meditations on virtue, and reflections on nature,
essence, and sexual difference. As critics of modernism and
liberalism in our day, some feminists seek significant alternatives
in the classical era while eschewing ancient sexism.
From the essays in this volume, which are divided into two
parts, "Theoretical Sciences" and "Practical and Productive
Sciences," reflecting the traditional structure of works in the
Aristotelian corpus, we learn not only about Aristotle but about a
new feminist methodology in approaching major contemporary issues
such as surrogate motherhood and women in the military. We also
find a new perspective on feminist debates over whether logic is
gendered, the advantages of an "ethics of care," feminist
epistemology, and the nature of critical feminist
spectatorship.
Contributors are Angela Curran, Marguerite Deslauriers, Cynthia
Freeland, Ruth Groenhout, Marjorie Hass, Linda Hirshman, Luce
Irigaray, Barbara Koziak, Deborah Modrak, Martha Nussbaum, Carol
Poster, and Charlotte Witt.
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