For Her Own Good: Protecting Women in Research

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 5 (3):346 (1996)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

In gender mythology woman is nature, the embodiment of life, destruction, and death. Semantically encoded in good and evil, the one conceptual stability woman represents is ambivalence. As a walled garden in which nature works its demonic sorcery, she turns a gob of refuse into a spreading web of sentient being, floating on the snaky umbilical by which she leashes every man. But as an ontological entity, woman is the real First Mover. The pregnant woman is devilishly complete. She needs nothing and no one.2 Confronted with the terrible sense of woman's power, man is forced to wrestle with her nature to gain his identity, never to fall back into her. Man is the essential, the norm, the absolute One without reciprocity. Woman is “the Other, posed by the One to define itself, the inessential who never goes back to being the essential and the absolute Other without reciprocity

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,423

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Protecting Human Dignity in Research Involving Humans.Thomas De Koninck - 2009 - Journal of Academic Ethics 7 (1-2):17-25.
Frontiers and new vistas in women in management research.Uma Sekaran - 1990 - Journal of Business Ethics 9 (4-5):247 - 255.
Protecting women from their abortion choices.Rebecca Dresser - 2007 - Hastings Center Report 37 (6):13-14.
Good Women and Bad Men: A Bias in Feminist Research.Iddo Landau - 1997 - Journal of Social Philosophy 28 (1):141-150.

Analytics

Added to PP
2010-08-24

Downloads
41 (#380,229)

6 months
7 (#418,426)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?