Tag Archives: Islam and the Erosion of Women’s Rights
Abortion on My Mind
Abortion on My Mind First, let’s approach this vexing topic from the metaphysical side. If we adopt the Aristotelian view of gestation (a view that, if I’m correct, was part of the thinking of Christian philosophers in the High … Continue reading →
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Tagged Abigail L Rosenthal’s Feminism Without Contradictions, Aristotelian view, asymmetry of the sexes, Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s Prey: Immigration, biology and feminism, biology and rights, biology and social constructs, chivalry and the Titanic’s sinking, Islam and the Erosion of Women’s Rights, male protectiveness, men as the enemy, metaphysics and social questions, metaphysics and the unborn, mother’s body, Phyllis Chesler’s An American Bride in Kabul, potentiality to actuality, right to choose, right to life, rights of the unborn, Roe v Wade, Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex, sisterhood is powerful, social coarsening, status of the unborn, status of zygote, Terri Shiavo, unsisterly women, when is it a person, when soul enters body, women and children first, women in Iran, women’s rights, women’s social power, women’s standing, women’s suffrage, women’s vulnerability
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