A book of tremendous influence when it first appeared, A Mind of One's Own reminded readers that the tradition of Western philosophy-- in particular, the ideals of reason and objectivity-- has come down to us from white males, nearly all of whom are demonstrably sexist, even misogynist
Louise Anthony, Charlotte Witt
Feminism and Aristotle's rational ideal, Marcia L. Homiak; cartesian reason and gendered reason, Margaret Atherton; Hume - the reflective women's epistemologist?, Annette C. Baier; could it be worth thinking about Kant on sex and marriage?, Barbara Herman; maleness, metaphor and the "crisis" of reason, Genevieve Lloyd; one being objective and being objectified, Sally Haslanger; reason and essence in the legal thought of Catharine MacKinnon, Elizabeth Rapaport; though this be method, yet there is madness in it - paranoia and liberal epistemology, Naomi Scheman; resurrecting embodiment - toward a feminist materialism, Robin May Schott; Quine as feminist - the radical import of naturalized epistemology, Louise M. Anthony; feminist contractarianism, Jean Hampton; essential tensions, phase two - feminist, philosophical and social studies of science, Helen E. Longino; feminist metaphysics, Charlotte Witt.