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1 - Women and the standpoint of concrete others

From the criticism of discourse ethics to feminist social criticism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2013

Jude Browne
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University of Cambridge
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Summary

Que nous veulent les lois du juste et de l’injuste?

Baudelaire

γυμνωτέος δη πάντων πλην δικαιοσυνύνης

Plato

From the mid 1980s onwards an influential strand of feminist criticism of Rawls arose from a confluence of Gilligan’s moral psychology and Sandel’s communitarian critique which was subsequently turned against a certain kind of moral theory, including Habermas’s discourse ethics. In particular, Benhabib’s distinction between the standpoint of the generalised other and the standpoint of the concrete other was crucial to this debate and inspired many to follow this critical path. In my view, however, this distinction is misconceived, and the interpretation of Habermas’s discourse ethics to which it gives rise, mistaken. At best, it leads Benhabib to develop criticisms of Habermas’s conception of the moral standpoint, some of which are valid, though in need of further specification. However, neither these valid criticisms of discourse ethics, nor, I believe, the broader feminist critique of moral theory are obviously germane to feminism, and it remains unclear to this day how they advance the practical aims of feminist social criticism, such as the overcoming of ongoing injustice and the emancipation from patriarchal oppression.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2013

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