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erica pfp
erica
@heavygweit
i'm going to fail at putting this into words but i want to have this discussion: i have noticed that most popular philosophy focuses on detachment (stoicism, buddhism/taoism, rationality and abstract reasoning, etc) most of philosophy was generated in a time where women weren't allowed to contribute to the larger collective knowledge or participate in any educational system so my discussion/q is: if most philosophy originates from men, who historically view attachment (and therefor, emotion) as largely negative, what would philosophy be like if people more accepting of and in touch with their emotions contributed to the field of philosophy? is stoicism really a philosophy that can help you feel better, when most current research indicates that connection and community are the biggest predictors of life satisfaction? (my little research did show me that female philosophers focus on relationality, embodiment, care ethics, less abstract/universal philosophies, situated knowledge vs absolute knowledge, etc)
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Steen!!!
@usersteen.eth
Any recommended reading so far??
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erica pfp
erica
@heavygweit
i will be reading this interpretation of the Tao Te Ching and also some writings from: > Carol Gilligan > Simone de Beauvoir > Sandra Harding > Edith Stein along with some podcasts that do deeper dives into the more well-known male philosophers as i'm quickly learning the way people *talk* about their philosophies is not a good representation always of the original writing/thinking https://warpcast.com/olystuart/0x648d3c38
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