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Annie
Annie is on page 100 of 422
Sexual difference, for Wollstonecraft, originated at the level of men’s and women’s distinctive bodies, manifested in their distinctive capacities for paternity and maternity…Others, following Rousseau, seemed to believe, by contrast, that men and women had entirely different natures that arose from their distinctive “masculine” or “feminine” souls. (Cont in comment below cause it’s so interesting)
Oct 11, 2025 10:08AM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)

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Annie
Annie is on page 282 of 422
If much historical injustice and prejudice against women has been corrected in our time, the culturally essential work of families and family-supporting communities—practiced and handed down over the ages—has been sorely neglected. Without a substantive account of human freedom, and it’s proper end, human excellence, the essential human goods of children, family, and community, so necessary for authentic (cont)
Oct 20, 2025 10:05AM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)


Annie
Annie is on page 278 of 422
Oct 19, 2025 12:56PM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)


Annie
Annie is on page 272 of 422
At their best, families, and the communities that support them, provide the surest protection against the ever-encroaching market mentality, helping persons, in Glendon’s words, “to develop an internalized willingness to view others with genuine respect and concern, rather than as objects, means, or obstacles.”
Oct 19, 2025 12:34PM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)


Annie
Annie is on page 271 of 422
“Let us stimulate the free market is the greatest device that human beings have discovered for unleashing economic energy and creativity, for utilizing resources, and for responding to human needs…Nevertheless, those who do not want to see any interference with market forces in the form of family policy or labor policy need to think again…The market, like our democratic experiment, requires a certain kind(cont)
Oct 19, 2025 09:39AM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)


Annie
Annie is on page 230 of 422
Previous generations of women’s rights advocates sought to protect the culturally essential work of caregiving from the erosion of an ever-encroaching market and its materialistic economic principles. A woman’s movement that regards abortion rights as *equal citizenship rights* has surrendered, once and for all, to the logic of the market.

Dang.
Oct 18, 2025 04:25PM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)


Annie
Annie is on page 225 of 422
“Having known oppression, we cannot stand by and allow the oppression of an entire class of weaker human beings. Having once been owned by our husbands, we cannot condone a position that says the unborn are owned by their mothers. Remembering a time when our value was determined by whether a man wanted us, we refuse to bow to the patriarchal attitude that says the unborn child’s value is determined (cont)
Oct 18, 2025 02:59PM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)


Annie
Annie is on page 208 of 422
Oct 17, 2025 07:05AM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)


Annie
Annie is on page 199 of 422
Oct 16, 2025 10:46PM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)


Annie
Annie is on page 190 of 422
Oct 15, 2025 12:20PM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)


Annie
Annie is on page 150 of 422
In the apt words of a southern academic at the time: “[Strict equality feminists] would free women from the rule of men only to make them greater slaves to the machines of industry.”
Oct 13, 2025 08:58AM
The Rights of Women: Reclaiming a Lost Vision (Catholic Ideas for a Secular World)


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message 1: by Annie (new) - added it

Annie “Thus, for Wollstonecraft, the soul was rational, but the body, sexed; for Rousseau, the soul itself was sexed.”


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