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OverviewHow can we accept the gender system in view of its ills? Yet, are we really at liberty to abolish gender differences, ""when the gender system gives us benchmarks of personal identity and worth along with primary channels in which to pursue the rewards of love?"" With this double question, Steven G. Smith introduces his inquiry into the idea of gender and how it is implicated in love, respect, equality, and personal character. Gender Thinking is the first comprehensive philosophical exploration of the concept of gender Asking the question, what is gender?-that is, what sort of thing do we take femininity and masculinity to be?-Smith considers how gender thinking is interwoven with ideas about human nature. He suggests ways in which ideas about race, class, culture age, temperament, and sexual orientation can be understood from clues found in gender thinking. And he calls for a renegotiated procreative partnership between women and men as the key to the redemption of gender. Author note: Steven G. Smith is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Millsaps College and author of The Concept of the Spiritual: An Essay in First Philosophy (Temple). Full Product DetailsAuthor: Stephen SmithPublisher: Temple University Press,U.S. Imprint: Temple University Press,U.S. Dimensions: Width: 16.50cm , Height: 3.00cm , Length: 24.10cm Weight: 0.726kg ISBN: 9780877229636ISBN 10: 0877229635 Pages: 384 Publication Date: 29 September 1992 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsPreface A Prologue on Democracy 1. The Two Sides of Gender Thinking Positive Gender Thinking • Critical Gender Thinking • Implications for Our Study 2. On Conceiving the Human The ""Human"" • ""Nature"" • Following Nature • Gender as an Anthropological Theme 3. Gender and Humanity The Problem: How to Behave • How Gender Qualifies Gender • Gender and Central Human Projects • Gender and Other Human Kinds Compared • Human Nature as an Endowment of Diversities 4. The Sex ""Basis"" of Gender The Problem of Junction Between Intentional and Descriptive Concepts • The Structure of Embodiment • Qualifications of Intention by Sex • Gender and Biological Facts • Human Nature as Animal Nature: Human Biology and Anthropology • Human Nature as animal nature: The Beast Within • The Case of Sexual Jealousy • Human Nature as Sexual Consistency: The Racial Parallel 5. Gender, Valuation, and Selfhood The Attractions of Gender and ""Finer Feelings"": Kant • The Structure of Valuing • A Puzzle: How can a Valuer Value a Different Way of Valuing? • The Gendering of Ethics: Gilligan • Pornography and Other Pathologies of Gender Valuation • Androgyny and Perplexity • Gender Character and ""True Self"" • Gendered Selfhood and the Asymmetry Problem in High Noon • Human Nature as a Set of Gendered Métiers 6. Gender and Duality The Problem: How to Think • Structures of Duality • Metaphysical Gender-Duality Theories: Hegel and Levinas • Theological Gender-Duality Theories: The Shakers and Paul • Social-Scientific Gender-Duality Theories: Freud and Lévi-Strauss • Human Nature as a Harmony of the Sexes and Genders 7. Gender and Procreation The Relevance of Procreation to Gender and Human Nature • The Structure of Procreative Activity • Generationality, Potentiation, and Determination • Gender and Issues of Procreative Choice Conclusion: Realizing Sex Realized Imaginatively • Realized Intellectually • Realized Spiritually • Realized Practically Notes IndexReviewsThis is quite an extraordinary piece of sustained 'thoughtwork,' laying out its own weave of analysis, synthesis, and proposal in conversation with a wonderful array of other works and positions. The depth and care of engagement with the problem and promise of rethinking humankind with respect for gender marks is as an accomplishment that makes a crucial point: that thinking about the human without thinking as gendered creatures about gender is both impossible and, as we might say, in bad faith. Thus, the book helps us take a step toward rectifying what we think about, who and what we think as, when we engage in the curious reflexivity of thinking about our own humanity. --Elizabeth Minnich, Union Institute, author of Transforming Knowledge Author InformationSteven G. Smith is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Millsaps College and author of The Concept of the Spiritual: An Essay in First Philosophy (Temple). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |