Feminism, Family, and Women's Rights: A Hermeneutic Realist Perspective
Browning, D. (2003). "Feminism, Family, and Women's Rights: A Hermeneutic Realist Perspective." Zygon Journal of Religion and Science, 38 (2): 317-32.
Abstract: In this article I apply the insights of hermeneutic realism to a
practical-theological ethics that addresses the international crisis of
families and women's rights. Hermeneutic realism affirms the
hermeneutic philosophy of Hans-Georg Gadamer but enriches it with the
dialectic of participation and distanciation developed by Paul Ricoeur.
This approach finds a place for sciences such as evolutionary
psychology within a hermeneutically informed ethic. It also points to a
multidimensional model of practical reason that views it as implicitly
or explicitly involving five levels—background metaphysical visions,
some principle of obligation, assumptions about pervasive human
tendencies and needs, assumptions about constraining social and natural
environments, and assumed acceptable rules of conduct. The fruitfulness
of this multidimensional view of practical reason is then demonstrated
by applying it to practical-theological ethics and the analysis of four
theorists of women's rights—Martha Nussbaum, Susan Moller Okin, Lisa
Cahill, and Mary Ann Glendon. Finally, I illustrate the importance and
limits of the visional dimension of practical reason by discussing the
concept of "Africanity" in relation to the family and AIDS crisis of
Eastern Africa.
Source: Wiley InterScience
(My publication)Posted: Saturday, February 01, 2003
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dsbrowni