Traditionally the ethic of care has been associated with women
while the ethic of justice has been associated with men. In recent
years some feminist philosophers have turned their energies to
developing theories of care and to exploring the epistemological
assumptions on which the ethic of care is based. This volume
proposes an original theory of care, building on insights of both
feminist and non-feminist critics of liberal moral theory, gleaning
ideas from feminist ethics and epistemologies, and stimulated by
the writings of post-colonial feminists. The author shows that a
number of ethical and epistemological imperatives can be defined
through the philosophical elaboration of an ethic of care and the
endeavor to know and to care well.
Can the actual experienced practices of caring and the abstract
conceptual thought process of philosophy be mutually informing? The
author argues that the concrete everyday response of care provides
the grounds for new ways of thinking about both ethics and reason.
By examining the works of Kant, Mill, and Rawls, she describes and
defends a radical critique of the liberal moral theory of Gilligan
and Noddings and a transformed ethic of care, accounting for care
as both action and disposition. This vigorous study will have
applications in the fields of sociology, ethics, moral and
political philosophy, political science, nursing, medicine, and
education. A comprehensive and up-to-date Bibliography provides
readers with excellent resources for further study.
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