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Feminist Perspectives on Science

Hypatia 3 (1):139 - 144 (1988)

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  1. Scientific objectivity and the logics of science.H. E. Longino - 1983 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 26 (1):85 – 106.
    This paper develops an account of scientific objectivity for a relativist theory of evidence. It briefly reviews the character and shortcomings of empiricist and wholist treatments of theory acceptance and objectivity and argues that the relativist account of evidence developed by the author in an earlier essay offers a more satisfactory framework within which to approach questions of justification and intertheoretic comparison. The difficulty with relativism is that it seems to eliminate objectivity from scientific method. Reconceiving objectivity as a function (...)
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  • (1 other version)Discovering Reality. Feminist Perspectives on Epistemology, Metaphysics, Methodology, and Philosophy of Science.Sandra Harding & Merril B. Hintikka - 1986 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 48 (2):344-345.
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  • (1 other version)The death of nature.Carolyn Merchant - forthcoming - Environmental Philosophy: From Animal Rights to Radical Ecology.
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  • (1 other version)Beyond “Bad Science”: Skeptical Reflections on the Value-Freedom of Scientific Inquiry.Helen Longino - 1983 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 8 (1):7-17.
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  • The Sexual Politics of Victorian Social Anthropology.Elizabeth Fee - 1973 - Feminist Studies 1 (3/4):23.
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  • (2 other versions)[Book review] the science question in feminism. [REVIEW]Sandra G. Harding - 1988 - Feminist Studies 14 (1):561-574.
    This essay is a critical review of Sandra Harding's The Science Question in Feminism. Her text constitutes a monumental effort to capture an overview of recent feminist critique of science and to develop a feminist dialectical and materialist conception of the history of masculinist science. In this analysis of Harding's work, the organizing categories as well as the main assumptions of the text are reconstructed for closer examination within the context of modern feminist critique of science and feminist theory in (...)
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  • Sex differences research: Science or belief.Ruth Bleier - 1986 - In Feminist approaches to science. New York: Pergamon Press. pp. 147--164.
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  • Is Gender a Variable in Conceptions of Rationality? A Survey of Issues.Sandra Harding - 1982 - Dialectica 36 (2‐3):225-242.
    SummaryPhilosophic questions about the adequacy of our prevailing Western conceptions of rationality have emerged from the growing recognition that one cannot simply “add women” as objects of knowledge to the existing bodies of our social and natural knowledge. Recent research in psychology and in moral development theory suggests that our understandings of the rationality of human activity are distorted and obscured by systematically identifying as universally desireable, as Human goals, conceptions of the self, others, and the appropriate relationships between the (...)
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  • Women's Brains.Stephen Jay Gould - unknown
    IN THE PRELUDE to Middlemarch, George Eliot lamented the unfulfilled lives of talented women: Some have felt that these blundering lives are due to the inconvenient indefiniteness with which the Supreme Power has fashioned the natures of women: if there were one level of feminine incompetence as strict as the ability to count three and no more, the social lot of women might be treated with scientific certitude. Eliot goes on to discount the idea of innate limitation, but while she (...)
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  • Baconian Science: A Hermaphroditic Birth.Evelyn Fox Keller - 1980 - Philosophical Forum 11 (3):299.
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  • Biology, Sex Hormones, and Sexism in the 1920's.Diana Long Hall - 1973 - Philosophical Forum 5 (1):81.
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  • Teaching for change: Feminism and the sciences.A. M. Woodhull, Nancy Lowry & Mary Sue Henifin - 1985 - Journal of Thought 20 (3).
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  • (1 other version)The Mismeasure of Man.Stephen Jay Gould - 1983 - Ethics 94 (1):153-155.
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  • In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women’s Development.Carol Gilligan - 1982 - The Personalist Forum 2 (2):150-152.
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  • Nature and Nurture: A False Dichotomy?Laura Purdy - 1986 - Hypatia 1 (1):167-174.
    Nancy Tuana holds that the nature/nurture dichotomy does not accurately represent the world and hence that a whole series of assumptions about human nature is mistaken. She rejects both biological determinism and alternative interactionist views. I argue that although her arguments and political concerns do rule out any kind of simple biological determinism, they do not show that the alternative interactionist view is untenable: in fact, she uses the distinction in her attempt to demolish it. I argue that the assumption (...)
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  • An Imagined World: A Story of Scientific Discovery.June Goodfield - 1982 - Journal of the History of Biology 15 (2):321-322.
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