2 Matching Annotations
  1. Sep 2020
    1. But, again, the care of h . . ot ers and keepmg of the commuruty together-these are the issues tha h b . . h. l t t e women are nngmg up t IS way, not one ranger type rights issues

      It seems as if throughout movements, women organizers tend to be community-oriented and fight for more than just themselves since, stereotypically, the burden of caring for others has been placed on women. Therefore, individualism rarely has place in their organizing work. In addition, a sense of community and togetherness highlights how a suppressed voice can become heard through collective activism that helps women define their experiences and reality, rather than these being imposed upon them.

    1. Page 38: "But we shall maintain that it is impossible to desire a morality other than that endorsed by the condition of a society at a given time. To desire a morality other than that implied by the nature of society is to deny the latter, and consequently, oneself."

      What does this imply? How can someone be denying themselves by desiring a different morality other than the one endorsed in their society? Is morality in this context about the will to live in one's society as right whereas the desire for another morality is seen as wrong as the subsequent sentences suggest?

      Or, are these statements dealing with the concept of moral relativism and how it's inadequate to insist and pass moral judgments on beliefs and practices characteristic of one's own society drawing from other societies' morals? Perhaps still, these statements could be describing moral nihilists who do not believe anything is morally right or wrong which means they deny their own morality.

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