Discovering Reality: Feminist Perspectives on Epistemology, Metaphysics, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science

Front Cover
Sandra Harding, Merrill B. Hintikka †
Springer Science & Business Media, Jul 31, 2003 - Philosophy - 332 pages
During the last decade, feminist research has attempted to add understandings of women and their social activities to what we all thought we knew about nature and social life. However, from the very beginning of this project, it has appeared to be in tension with some ofthe most fundamental insightsof the Second Women's Movement. Only recently has the nature ofthis tension become clear. Within the theories, concepts, methods and goals of inquiry we inherited from the dominant discourses we have generated an impressive collection of "facts" about women and their lives, cross-culturally and historically - and we can produce many, many more. But these do not, and cannot, add up to more than a partial and distorted understanding of the patterns of women's lives. We cannot understand women and their lives by adding facts about them to bodies of knowledge which take men, their lives, and their beliefs as the human norm. Furthermore, it is now evident that if women's livescannot be understood within the inherited inquiry frameworks, than neither can men's lives. The attempts to add understandings of women to our knowledge of nature and social life have led to the realization that there is precious little reliable knowledge to which to add them. A more fundamental project now confronts us. Wemust root out sexist distortions and perversions in epistemology, metaphysics, methodology and the philos ophy of science - in the "hard core" of abstract reasoning thought most immune to inftltration by social values.
 

Selected pages

Contents

ON ARISTOTLES BIOLOGY OF REPRODUCTION
1
ARISTOTLE AND THE POLITICIZATION OF THE SOUL
17
OUR ARISTOTELIAN HANGOVER
31
HAVE ONLY MEN EVOLVED?
45
EVOLUTION AND PATRIARCHAL MYTHS OF SCARCITY AND COMPETITION
71
FORERUNNER OF A FEMINIST SOCIAL SCIENCE
97
THE TRIVIALIZATION OF THE NOTION OF EQUALITY
121
HOW CAN LANGUAGE BE SEXIST?
139
THE MAN OF PROFESSIONAL WISDOM
165
GENDER AND SCIENCE
187
THE MINDS EYE
207
INDIVIDUALISM AND THE OBJECTS OF PSYCHOLOGY
225
A PSYCHOANALYTIC PERSPECTIVE ON EPISTEMOLOGY AND METAPHYSICS
245
DEVELOPING THE GROUND FOR A SPECIFICALLY FEMINIST HISTORICAL MATERIALISM
283
WHY HAS THE SEXGENDER SYSTEM BECOME VISIBLE ONLY NOW?
311
INDEX OF NAMES
325

THE ADVERSARY METHOD
149

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2003)

Born in San Francisco, Harding received her B.A. from Douglass College and both her M.A. and Ph.D. from New York University. She has held teaching positions in philosophy at the State University of New York at Albany and at the University of Delaware, becoming director of women's studies at the University of Delaware in 1985. Early in her writing career, Harding's research was grounded in a fairly traditional approach to the philosophy of science. Over the years, however, she has become increasingly interested in the distorting influences of sexism and male bias. Although she is only one of a number of philosophers concerned with feminist issues and themes, Harding has ventured deeply into epistemological issues, offering a feminist critique of the very roots of Western thinking. Distinguished by a clear, forceful, and persuasive style, her more recent studies scrutinize the underlying motives driving the methods of the sciences.

Bibliographic information