Su naturalismi e filosofie femministe in relazione a cognizione e conoscenza

Any attempt to evaluate a naturalistic feminist philosophy of cognition and knowledge must acknowledge that there are two distinct core approaches to naturalism (one more radical and well-interpreted by Quine, while the other more moderate and well-interpreted by Goldman). Classical feminist natural...

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Main Author: Nicola Vassallo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rosenberg & Sellier 2010-06-01
Series:Rivista di Estetica
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/estetica/1694
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spelling doaj-1d5e81020bab4b6d981ebd3574b991472020-11-25T01:51:42ZengRosenberg & SellierRivista di Estetica0035-62122421-58642010-06-014411913410.4000/estetica.1694Su naturalismi e filosofie femministe in relazione a cognizione e conoscenzaNicola VassalloAny attempt to evaluate a naturalistic feminist philosophy of cognition and knowledge must acknowledge that there are two distinct core approaches to naturalism (one more radical and well-interpreted by Quine, while the other more moderate and well-interpreted by Goldman). Classical feminist naturalizations of epistemology have drawn inspiration from the Quinean naturalization, they have inherited its defects – the major one: being compelled to renounce doing real epistemology in favor of a merely scientific enterprise.Notwithstanding, the merits of these feminist naturalizations are more than one: they embrace the idea that epistemology needs contributions and help from the sciences, they raise serious doubts about the best science to involve in feminist epistemologies, they contrast (even if implicit) our “local feminist philosophy” (that is, mostly Italian one) not only in its scorn for every science and its technological applications, but also in its conviction that there are essential differences between female/women and male/men about knowledge and cognition.I wish to propose a naturalized feminist epistemology which draws inspiration from the more moderate Goldmanian approach. Much work would be needed in order to combine those feminist approaches which believe in the individualism of the knowing subject with those that are anti–individualist. But, at least, taking inspiration from Goldman and his reliabilism, we may achieve a type of naturalism in feminist epistemologies, in which it would be feasible to understand the reliability of the cognitive faculties of the knowing subject and to understand scientifically whether or not there are differences between female and male faculties – avoiding any essentialist temptations.http://journals.openedition.org/estetica/1694
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicola Vassallo
spellingShingle Nicola Vassallo
Su naturalismi e filosofie femministe in relazione a cognizione e conoscenza
Rivista di Estetica
author_facet Nicola Vassallo
author_sort Nicola Vassallo
title Su naturalismi e filosofie femministe in relazione a cognizione e conoscenza
title_short Su naturalismi e filosofie femministe in relazione a cognizione e conoscenza
title_full Su naturalismi e filosofie femministe in relazione a cognizione e conoscenza
title_fullStr Su naturalismi e filosofie femministe in relazione a cognizione e conoscenza
title_full_unstemmed Su naturalismi e filosofie femministe in relazione a cognizione e conoscenza
title_sort su naturalismi e filosofie femministe in relazione a cognizione e conoscenza
publisher Rosenberg & Sellier
series Rivista di Estetica
issn 0035-6212
2421-5864
publishDate 2010-06-01
description Any attempt to evaluate a naturalistic feminist philosophy of cognition and knowledge must acknowledge that there are two distinct core approaches to naturalism (one more radical and well-interpreted by Quine, while the other more moderate and well-interpreted by Goldman). Classical feminist naturalizations of epistemology have drawn inspiration from the Quinean naturalization, they have inherited its defects – the major one: being compelled to renounce doing real epistemology in favor of a merely scientific enterprise.Notwithstanding, the merits of these feminist naturalizations are more than one: they embrace the idea that epistemology needs contributions and help from the sciences, they raise serious doubts about the best science to involve in feminist epistemologies, they contrast (even if implicit) our “local feminist philosophy” (that is, mostly Italian one) not only in its scorn for every science and its technological applications, but also in its conviction that there are essential differences between female/women and male/men about knowledge and cognition.I wish to propose a naturalized feminist epistemology which draws inspiration from the more moderate Goldmanian approach. Much work would be needed in order to combine those feminist approaches which believe in the individualism of the knowing subject with those that are anti–individualist. But, at least, taking inspiration from Goldman and his reliabilism, we may achieve a type of naturalism in feminist epistemologies, in which it would be feasible to understand the reliability of the cognitive faculties of the knowing subject and to understand scientifically whether or not there are differences between female and male faculties – avoiding any essentialist temptations.
url http://journals.openedition.org/estetica/1694
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