Okin Women's Autonomy Summary

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But, Okin asserts that a concentrated effort along with women movements should work together to identify and cure them along with the help of the state which could work together and promote women autonomy. However often there is a difference amidst the liberal feminist about the role of personal autonomy in one’s life, the suitable role of the state and how liberal feminism can be made acceptable.

Counter-arguement : 800

The first of the arguments deals with women’s autonomy. Okin’s thought was not to deny minority women’s activity or autonomy but relatively to condemn the liberal States as well as liberal theorists who were susceptible to ignore listening to them, particularly in the situation of younger women, and agree to take self-proclaimed …show more content…

In this regard Gilligan’s book is a protest in contradiction of the male centred personality of Erickson and Freud, and also the male centered developmental psychology of Kohlberg. Her criticism rests upon the fact that is not unfair to omit women out of psychology but her criticism is based on the fact that it is not fair in the derivation of psychology if it avoids almost half the human race. Gilligan suggests a stage theory for the moral development of women. According to her cautious interviews with women creating significant choices in their lives, Gilligan decided that these women were involved in more things about caring and to do rather than the things the guidelines permitted. So she thought Kohlberg was not so great regarding women's growth in moral thinking. What led her to think this was the statement that in some of Kohlberg's surveys, women came out to score lower and less developed than men. She was going contrary to the current psychological opinion of Freud, who thought that women's moral sense was underdeveloped since they remained close to their mothers. It is worth mentioning that in an allied criticism, Okin puts forward that libertarian or classical-liberal views are self-refuting. If people have a power to control their …show more content…

The talk emphasises on the answers of the children's to a moral problem of the Heinz dilemma. Built upon their answers to this dilemma, Carol Gilligan claims that the moral development of Amy the girl follows a different route, which not inferior but different from the pattern of the boy Jake. She labels the female explanation to moral problems as the "ethic of care" while terms the male outlook as the "ethic of

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