Frustration over the marginalisation of female philosophers was the impetus for The Philosopher Queens, a book that sets out to restore women to their rightful place in the history of philosophy.
Co-editor Rebecca Buxton is now a DPhil student at the University of Oxford working on political philosophy and forced migration 鈥 a field in which women were making a central and roughly equal contribution to men, she said.
Yet she told 糖心Vlog that when she was studying philosophy as an undergraduate, she had only one female lecturer and 鈥渘o聽woman was paid explicit attention聽to鈥 on the syllabus. A recent book called simply The聽Great Philosophers consisted of 鈥12 chapters, all by men, about men, plus two male editors鈥.
At best, Ms Buxton went on, 鈥渢he only time you are taught women in philosophy is when you do the feminism week at the end of Political Philosophy聽101. Women are often siloed into the area of philosophy about women.鈥
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She also recalled being 鈥渧ery disappointed鈥 in her final term when she discovered that Hilary Putnam, 鈥渙ne of the really big figures in contemporary philosophy鈥, was a man and not a woman.
Yet the almost complete exclusion of women from standard accounts of philosophy, according to Ms Buxton, was in no way 鈥渁n accurate representation鈥.
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She acknowledged that 鈥渨omen have done less philosophy鈥 over the course of history, a result of factors such as lack of educational opportunities. And she accepted that there was an element of truth in the 鈥済eneralisation that men tend to do more abstract, pure philosophy and women tend to do more problem-centred, social justice-type philosophy鈥. Yet there were now many examples of women 鈥渆ngaging across the entire spectrum of philosophy鈥, she said.
Although Ms Buxton loves Plato and other canonical figures, she also claimed that 鈥渢here are some thinkers who don鈥檛 potentially offer the kind of rich philosophical thought that women do, and yet we read them instead of a lot of interesting women. I聽am not necessarily advocating eliminating anybody, but if we have a bar of inclusion, women routinely surpass the聽bar.鈥 (She refused to be drawn, however, when asked to name any overrated male philosophers.)
To help start setting the record straight, Ms Buxton teamed up with Lisa Whiting, a policy researcher who is also completing a master鈥檚 in government, policy and politics at Birkbeck, University of London to create the anthology titled The聽Philosopher Queens: The聽lives and legacies of philosophy鈥檚 unsung women (Unbound).
In it, 20 female thinkers of today pay tribute to their great predecessors, each illustrated by Emmy Smith. The historical names include Diotima, a central figure in one of Plato鈥檚 dialogues; Ban聽Zhao, 鈥減erhaps the greatest intellectual woman in ancient Chinese history鈥; Hannah Arendt, whose 1951 study, The Origins of Totalitarianism, became a surprise best-seller in the wake of Donald Trump鈥檚 election; Simone de聽Beauvoir; Iris Murdoch; Sophie Oluwole, a pioneer in bringing African philosophy into dialogue with the Western tradition; and black activist Angela Davis.
Some of these thinkers, Ms Buxton conceded, might not normally be described as 鈥減hilosophers鈥. However, she continued, 鈥淎ngela Davis and Immanuel Kant are not doing similar kinds of philosophy, but they are both fundamentally questioning the human experience.
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鈥淚n the most basic sense, they are doing the same sort of thing and would be well suited to being on a philosophy syllabus, even if the Kantian abstract stuff has traditionally been considered 鈥榩roper philosophy鈥.鈥
The sheer variety of the 鈥減hilosopher queens鈥 also meant that 鈥渋t wouldn鈥檛 make sense to have a separate undergraduate course on women philosophers. Women should just be integrated into the main philosophy courses 鈭 and not in a tokenistic way鈥or most philosophy departments, having even 10聽per cent women philosophers on their syllabus would be revolutionary.鈥
It is sometimes suggested that the 鈥済ladiatorial鈥 style of much philosophical debate can alienate female students and potential students. Did Ms Buxton see room for improvement here, too?
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While describing herself personally as 鈥渜uite outspoken and up for an argument鈥, she agreed that 鈥渢he aggressive, macho stuff is off-putting to a lot of women鈥hilosophy has become a fierce competition to out-argue each other, and the academic structure of the discipline hasn鈥檛 helped that.
鈥淵ou have to have journals and publications which rip to pieces somebody鈥檚 arguments. There are almost no聽papers which say: 鈥業聽basically agree with this person, with a couple of聽alterations.鈥欌f all your colleagues are trying to tear you to pieces in order to get publications out of it, it doesn鈥檛 become any kind of collaborative exercise.鈥
So it was very much to be welcomed, Ms Buxton added, that we are now developing other styles of philosophy that 鈥渄o聽involve unpacking and critiquing other people鈥檚 arguments, but which charitably help them to reconstruct their views in a more comprehensive way鈥.
Such developments were not only 鈥渕uch more welcoming鈥 for women (or men) 鈥渨ho don鈥檛 like that Oxford Union style of debate鈥 but were likely to 鈥渓ead to much better philosophy鈥.
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