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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9960848873902883
    Format: 1 online resource (71 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-009-02134-6 , 1-009-02154-0 , 1-009-02392-6
    Series Statement: Cambridge elements. Elements on women in the history of philosophy
    Content: Mary Wollstonecraft is recognized as an important early feminist. This Element argues that she is also an ingenious moral philosopher, who showed that true virtue and the liberty of women are necessarily interdependent. The Element consists of eight sections. After an introduction, Section 2 discusses Wollstonecraft's concept of reason by examining its metaphysical foundation and its role as moral capacity. According to Wollstonecraft, reason interacts closely with the passions. Then, Sections 3 and 4 discuss the roles of the passions and the imagination. Reason, passion and imagination all come together in Wollstonecraft's discussions of love and friendship, which are the topic of Section 5. Wollstonecraft values education and knowledge, but discussions of her epistemology have been rare. Section 6 analyses some aspects of her views on knowledge. Finally, Section 7 discusses Wollstonecraft's notion of virtue, including its relations to liberty and duty. Section 8 makes some general conclusions.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 27 Sep 2022). , Cover -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Mary Wollstonecraft -- Contents -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Reason -- 2.1 Reason and Providence -- 2.2 Reason and Liberty -- 2.3 The Exercises of Reason -- 3 Passion -- 3.1 Passions as Necessary Auxiliaries -- 3.1.1 Passions and Providence -- 3.1.2 Moral Psychology -- 3.2 Strong Passions, Sublime Emotions and Generous Feeling -- 4 Imagination -- 4.1 The Scope of the Imagination -- 4.2 Imagination as Motive Force -- 5 Love and Friendship -- 5.1 The Eighteenth-Century Context -- 5.2 Love and Esteem -- 5.3 Wollstonecraft's Conception of Love -- 6 Knowledge -- 6.1 Criticism of Gendered Knowledge -- 6.2 Innate Capacities and Empiricist Features -- 7 Virtue -- 7.1 Moral Realism -- 7.2 Liberty and Equality -- 7.3 The Unity of Virtue -- 7.4 Mind and Body -- 7.5 Aristotelian or Platonist Virtue? -- 7.6 Human Duties -- 8 Conclusions -- List of Abbreviations -- Appendix: A Brief Chronology of Mary Wollstonecraft's Life and Works -- References -- Acknowledgements.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781009010610
    Language: English
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