Synopses & Reviews
This book is the first collection of feminist essays on one of the central figures in the history of English-speaking philosophy. Besides providing a rich variety of feminist viewpoints on a wide range of Hume’s writings, the contributors introduce new themes into the scholarship on Hume, including gendered metaphors in his metaphysical texts, the role of society in the conception of the human mind, and his conception of human nature in relation to recent rejections of essentialism.
Hume scholarship as a whole still reflects the relative neglect in mainstream analytic philosophy of alternative—and so feminist—perspectives on philosophy. The essays in this volume show that the standard, narrow view of philosophy excludes valuable perspectives.
These essays cover a great diversity of subjects in Hume’s work. They discuss his theory of knowledge; his conception of human inquiry and the human mind; his views on our knowledge of the external world and the future; his treatments of the passions, emotions and virtue; his conception of moral education; his views on aesthetics and religion; and his historical work.
The contributors, members of philosophy, political science, theology, and English departments, employ a variety of critical techniques. The result is a volume that stands in enlightening contrast to the standard collections on David Hume.
Contributors are Annette C. Baier, Jennifer A. Herdt, Nancy J. Hirschmann, Sheridan Hough, Anne Jaap Jacobson, Joyce Jenkins, Genevieve Lloyd, Susan A. Martinelli-Fernandez, Robert Shaver, Aaron Smuts, Christine Swanton, Jacqueline Taylor, Kathryn Temple, and Christopher Williams.
Description
"Publications on Hume of interest to feminist philosophers": p. [309]-310. Includes bibliographical references and index.
About the Author
Anne Jaap Jacobson is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Chair of the Cognitive Science Initiative at the University of Houston.
Table of Contents
Hume : the reflective women's epistemologist? / Annette C. Baier -- Hume on the passion for truth / Genevieve Lloyd -- Reconceptualizing reasoning and writing the philosophical canon : the case of David Hume / Anne Jaap Jacobson -- The metaphorics of Hume's gendered skepticism / Aaron A. Smuts -- Hume and the reality of value / Jacqueline Taylor -- "Mr. Hobbes could have said no more" / Joyce L. Jenkins and Robert Shaver -- Compassion as a virtue in Hume / Christine Swanton -- Sympathy, empathy, and obligation : a feminist rereading / Nancy J. Hirschmann -- Social (re)construction : a Humean voice on moral education, social constructions, and feminism / Susan A. Martinelli-Fernandez -- Humean androgynes and the nature of 'nature' / Sheridan Hough -- False delicacy / Christopher Williams -- "Manly composition" : Hume and the History of England / Kathryn Temple -- Superstition and the timid sex / Jennifer A. Herdt.