•  2
    Metaphor
    In K. S. Goodman & Y. M. Goodman (eds.), Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics, Elsevier. pp. 2452-2456. 2006.
  • Generating Metaphors from Networks
    In Eric Steinhart & Eva Kittay (eds.), Approaches to Metaphor, Kluwer Academic. pp. 41-94. 1994.
    Metaphor's peculiar property to yield cognitive insight-- often in otherwise false sentences -- has been the focus of contemporary studies of metaphor. In Metaphor: Its Linguistic Structure and Cognitive Force, Eva Kittay develops the semantic field theory of metaphor (SFTM). The task of the present work is to formalize some of the central claims of SFTM. Formalization forces us to make the central concepts of SFTM precise and operational, and it enables us to evaluate the consistency and exp…Read more
  •  139
    Philosophy and Feminist Thinking (review)
    Philosophical Review 98 (1): 122-124. 1989.
  •  74
    Caring about Care
    Philosophy East and West 69 (3): 856-863. 2019.
    Every ethic, if it is not to be a feather in the wind, needs an epistemology. As we look at epistemologies from Plato's Theaetetus to Kant's First Critique to contemporary virtue epistemology, the question of knowledge is always tethered to an ethics, sometimes tightly, sometimes loosely. To live a good life and act rightly toward others, we need to know what we need to know to do this well; we need to know how to know that what we are doing is what is good or right; and we need to know how we c…Read more
  •  145
    Learning from My Daughter: The Value and Care of Disabled Minds
    with Eva Kittay
    Oxford University Press. 2019.
    Does life have meaning? What is flourishing? How do we attain the good life? Philosophers, and many others of us, have explored these questions for centuries. As Eva Feder Kittay points out, however, there is a flaw in the essential premise of these questions: they seem oblivious to the very nature of the ways in which humans live, omitting a world of co-dependency, and of the fact that we live in and through our bodies, whether they are fully abled or disabled. Our dependent, vulnerable, messy,…Read more
  •  50
    Le désir de normalité. Quelle qualité de vie pour les personnes porteuses de handicap cognitif sévère?
    Alter - European Journal of Disability Research / Revue Européenne de Recherche Sur le Handicap 9 (3): 175-185. 2015.
  •  103
    Among the various human forms alluded to in the Hebrew prayer, mental retardation appears to be one of the most difficult to celebrate. It is the disability that other disabled persons do not want attributed to them. It is the disability for which prospective parents are most likely to use selective abortion (Wertz 2000). And it is the disability that prompted one of the most illustrious United States Supreme Court Justices to endorse forced sterilization, because "three generations of imbeciles…Read more
  •  153
    Case Study: Shouldering the Burden of Care
    with Stacy J. Sanders
    Hastings Center Report 35 (5): 14. 2005.
  •  116
    How Not to Argue for Selective Reproductive Procedures
    Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 27 (2): 185-215. 2017.
    Disability theorists have argued that the belief that we should prevent the birth of people with disabilities is prejudicial against disabled people. Particularly influential has been the Expressivity Objection to reproductive selective procedures aimed at eliminating disability. The Expressivity Objection in its strongest form says that to prevent the birth of a disabled child is to express the view that a disabled life is not worth living. In its weaker form, it says that to prevent the birth …Read more
  •  280
    Planning a trip to Italy, arriving in Holland: The delusion of choice in planning a family
    International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 3 (2): 9. 2010.
    The title of this paper deserves an explanation—or rather two explanations, one for the portion preceding the colon, the other for that following as the subtitle. The first part is derived from a short essay by Emily Perl Kingsley, written in 1987 in response to questions she had received about what it is like to raise a child with Down Syndrome.1 Kingsley suggests that planning for a child is like planning a trip to some wonderful destination—in her example, Italy. She asks us to imagine the an…Read more
  • Metaphor, its cognitive force and linguistic structure
    Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 179 (4): 636-636. 1989.
  • Women and Moral Theory
    with Diana T. Meyers
    Ethics 99 (1): 125-135. 1988.
  •  83
    The Blackwell Guide to Feminist Philosophy (edited book)
    Wiley-Blackwell. 2006.
    _The Blackwell Guide to Feminist Philosophy_ is a definitive introduction to the field, consisting of 15 newly-contributed essays that apply philosophical methods and approaches to feminist concerns. Offers a key view of the project of centering women’s experience. Includes topics such as feminism and pragmatism, lesbian philosophy, feminist epistemology, and women in the history of philosophy.
  •  128
    Two Dogmas of Moral Theory? Comments on Lisa Tessman’s Moral Failure
    Feminist Philosophy Quarterly 2 (1): 1-11. 2016.
    In Moral Failure, Lisa Tessman argues against two principles of moral theory, that ought implies can and that normative theory must be action-guiding. Although Tessman provides a trenchant account of how we are thrust into the misfortune of moral failure, often by our very efforts to act morally, and although she shows, through a discussion well-informed by the latest theorizing in ethics, neuroethics, and psychology, how much more moral theory can do than provide action-guiding principles, I ar…Read more
  • The justice position and the care perspective
    In Eva Feder Kittay (ed.), Women and Moral Theory, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 4--10. 1989.
  •  223
    Through a series of essays contributed by clinicians, medical historians, and prominent moral philosophers, Cognitive Disability and Its Challenge to Moral ...
  •  162
    Contemporary industrialized societies have been confronted with the fact and consequences of women's increased participation in paid employment. Whether this increase has resulted from women's desire for equality or from changing economic circumstances, women and men have been faced with a crisis in the organization of work that concerns dependents, that is, those unable to care for themselves. This is labor that has been largely unpaid, often unrecognized, and yet is indispensable to human soci…Read more
  •  84
    Metaphor: Its Cognitive Force and Linguistic Structure by Eva Kittay (review)
    Journal of Philosophy 88 (6): 324-330. 1991.
  •  72
    Deadly Medicine
    Res Philosophica 93 (4): 715-741. 2016.
    Equal moral status for all human beings does not commit us to the malignant exclusionary practices we find in racism and pernicious nationalism. Racism (like the other harmful “ism”) involves a group that is constituted by appropriating to one’s own “primal group” a set “desirable” intrinsic properties (or traits) and expelling from the primal group those with the undesirable properties through subjugation, exploitation, sterilization, or extermination. The moral harm in racism is practiced by a…Read more
  •  746
    Whose convenience? Whose truth?: A comment on Peter Singer's 'A convenient truth.'
    with Jeffrey Kittay
    201The Hastings Center Bioethics Forum, Wednesday, February 28, 2007.The Hastings Center Bioethics Forum. 2007.
    As parents of a young woman who very much resembles Ashley, we recognize the way her parents speak of their daughter’s preciousness, and of the love and joy she brings into their life. We know too well the hardships associated with rearing a child with severe physical and intellectual disabilities, especially in our own society, unyielding as it is to the medical needs even “normals” have. We would not have our daughter Sesha undergo similar interventions. We do not believe she is a perpetual ch…Read more
  •  152
    The identification of metaphor
    Synthese 58 (2): 153-202. 1984.
    A number of philosophers, linguists and psychologists have made the dual claim that metaphor is cognitively significant and that metaphorical utterances have a meaning not reducible to literal paraphrase. Such a position requires support from an account of metaphorical meaning that can render metaphors cognitively meaningful without the reduction to literal statement. It therefore requires a theory of meaning that can integrate metaphor within its sematics, yet specify why it is not reducible to…Read more
  •  2175
    On hypocrisy
    Metaphilosophy 13 (3-4): 277-289. 1982.
    I explore what and when hypocrisy is a moral wrong by interrogating the case of hypocrisy of Julien in Stendhal's The Red and The Black. I conclude hypocrisy is most morally vexed in those sphere where sincerity is required.
  •  104
    The Blackwell Guide to Feminist Philosophy (edited book)
    with Eva Feder Kittay, Martí , and Linda N. Alcoff
    Wiley-Blackwell. 2006.
    The Blackwell Guide to Feminist Philosophy is a definitive introduction to the field, consisting of 15 newly-contributed essays that apply philosophical methods and approaches to feminist concerns. Offers a key view of the project of centering women’s experience. Includes topics such as feminism and pragmatism, lesbian philosophy, feminist epistemology, and women in the history of philosophy.
  •  162
    The Subject of Care: Feminist Perspectives on Dependency (edited book)
    Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2003.
    All people spend a considerable portion of their lives either as dependents or the caretakers of dependents. The fact of human dependency—a function of youth, severe illness, disability, or frail old age—marks our lives, not only as those who are cared for, but as those who engage in the work of caring. In spite of the time, energy and resources-material and emotional, social and individual-that dependency care requires, these concerns rarely enter into philosophical, legal, and political discus…Read more