Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 256
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-8476-9668-0 • Hardback • October 2002 • $138.00 • (£106.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-1-4617-1137-7 • eBook • October 2002 • $131.00 • (£101.00)
Rachel Joffe Falmagne is professor of psychology at Clark University. Marjorie Hass is associate professor of philosophy at Muhlenberg College.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Representing Reason: Feminist Theory and Formal Logic
Chapter 2 Part One: Logic and the Structure of Thought
Chapter 3 The Politics of Reason: Towards a Feminist Logic
Chapter 4 Feminism and the Logic of Alterity
Chapter 5 Fluid Thinking: Irigaray's Critique of Formal Logic
Chapter 6 Power in the Service of Love: John Dewey's Logic and the Dream of a Common Language
Chapter 7 Words of Power and the Logic of Sense
Chapter 8 Part Two: Logic and Empirical Knowledge
Chapter 9 On Mapping a Transdisciplinary Approach to Reasoning
Chapter 10 Logic From a Quinean Perspective: An Empirical Enterprise
Chapter 11 Saying What It Is: Predicate Logic and Natural Kinds
Chapter 12 What do Girls Know Anyway?: Rationality, Gender, and Social Control
In this excellent collection, the authors develop insightful critiques of formal logic's claims to universal authority and transcendence, and they propose creative reconstructions of a rational domain long believed impervious to gendered political critique. These innovative essays engage debates in analytic philosophy, pragmatism, and continental thought, forging productive connections between logical formalism and concrete experiences....
— Lorraine Code, York University, Toronto
Feminist Theory and formal logic have long been thought to exist in worlds apart. This important collection brings these worlds together and shows the political undertones of even our most abstract concepts.....
— Linda Nicholson, Susan E. and William P. Stiritiz Distinguished Professor of Women's Studies, Washington University, St. Louis
This volume presents both feminist theorizing and theorizing about formal logic at their best. Feminist theorizing emerges from these essays as a growing critical movement that is showing that no area of philosophy is unsusceptible to constructive feminist rethinking. For anyone who still thinks that feminist theorizing and formal logic have little to do with each other (yet who likes to keep their views up to date), this book is essential reading.
— Phyllis Rooney, Oakland University, Michigan
In this excellent collection, the authors develop insightful critiques of formal logic's claims to universal authority and transcendence, and they propose creative reconstructions of a rational domain long believed impervious to genderedpolitical critique. These innovative essays engage debates in analytic philosophy, pragmatism, and continental thought, forgingproductive connections between logical formalism and concrete experiences.
— Lorraine Code, York University, Toronto
Feminist Theory and formal logic have long been thought to exist in worlds apart. This important collection brings these worldstogether and shows the political undertones of even our most abstract concepts.
— Linda Nicholson, Susan E. and William P. Stiritiz Distinguished Professor of Women's Studies, Washington University, St. Louis