Preface
Introduction
1. Resistance Is (Not) Futile: Analytical Feminism's Relation to
Political Philosophy, Ann E. Cudd
2. A Feminist, Kantian Conception of the Right to Bodily Integrity:
The Cases of Abortion and Homosexuality, Helga Varden
3. Autonomy in Relation, Andrea Westlund
4. Critical Character Theory: Toward a Feminist Perspective on
'Vice' (and 'Virtue'), Robin S. Dillon
5. Modesty as a Feminist Sexual Virtue, Anne Barnhill
6. Standards of Rationality and the Challenge of the Moral Skeptic,
Anita M. Superson
7. Constructivism and Feminism, Julia Driver
8. Politically Significant Terms and the Philosophy of Language:
Methodological Issues, Jennifer Saul
9. Illocution and Expectations of Being Heard, Maura Tumulty
10. Is There A 'Feminist' Philosophy of Language?, Louise
Antony
11. Silence and Institutional Prejudice, Miranda Fricker
12. Knowing Moral Agents: Epistemic Dependence and the Moral Realm,
Heidi E. Grasswick
13. What is Distinctive about Feminist Epistemology at 25?, Phyllis
Rooney
14. Uses of Value Judgments in Science: A General Argument, with
Lessons from a Case Study of Feminist Research on Divorce,
Elizabeth Anderson
15. The Analytic Tradition, Radical (Feminist) Interpretation, and
the Hygiene Hypothesis, Sharyn Clough
16. The Web of Valief: An Assessment of Feminist Radical
Empiricism, Miriam Solomon
17. Self-Constructions: An Existentialist Approach to Self and
Social Identity, Mariam Thalos
18. Who Is Included? Intersectionality, Metaphors, and the
Multiplicity of Gender, Ann Garry
Sharon Crasnow is Professor of Philosophy at Norco College. Her
current interests include feminist standpoint theory and the
epistemology of case studies in the social sciences. Her work
appears in several book chapters, as well as in Philosophy of
Science, Hypatia, Science and Education, and Philosophy of Social
Science.
Anita M. Superson is Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Kentucky. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Illinois at
Chicago in 1989. She specializes in ethics and feminism, the latter
of which she became interested in while serving as a teaching
assistant in a course on the topic. Much of her research in ethics
has been informed by feminism. She is the author of The Moral
Skeptic (OUP 2009).
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