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996Psychocorporeal Selfhood, Practical Intelligence, and Adaptive AutonomyIn Michael Kuhler & Najda Jelinek (eds.), Autonomy and the Self, Springer. 2012.It is not uncommon for people to suffer identity crises. Yet, faced with similarly disruptive circumstances, some people plunge into an identity crisis while others do not. How must selfhood be construed given that people are vulnerable to identity crises? And how must agency be construed given that some people skirt potential identity crises and renegotiate the terms of their personal identity without losing their equilibrium -- their sense of self? If an adequate theory of the self and age…Read more
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139Part IV. Section 2. Self-Respect and Autonomy: Meyers's discussion of self-respect takes into account work by Stephen Darwall, Thomas Hill, Jr., and Stephen Massey and proposes a unified triadic account that undermines the distinction between self-respect and self-esteem. After distinguishing compromised respect from unqualified respect, she shows why self-respect is both required for and a product of exercising autonomy competency.
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922Women Philosophers, Sidelined Challenges, and Professional PhilosophyHypatia 20 (3): 149-152. 2005.
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2152Artifice and Authenticity: Gender Technology and Agency in Two Jenny Saville PortraitsIn Laurie J. Shrage (ed.), You’Ve Changed: Sex Reassignment and Personal Identity, Oup Usa. 2009.This paper addresses two related topics: 1. The disanalogies between elective cosmetic practices and sex reassignment surgery. Why does it seem necessary for me – an aging professional woman – to ignore the blandishments of hairdressers wielding dyes and dermatologists wielding acids and scalpels? Why does it not seem equally necessary for a transgendered person to repudiate sex reassignment procedures? 2. The role of the body in identity and agency. How do phenomenological insights regardi…Read more
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109Liberty, Market and State: Political Economy in the 1980's, James M. Buchanan, New York: New York University Press, 1986, 320 pages (review)Economics and Philosophy 3 (2): 351. 1987.
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131Contrasting ontological accounts of autonomy with procedural accounts, Meyers defends the procedural model. For Meyers, the key question for a theory of autonomy is how people make decisions. She introduces the idea of autonomy competency - a repertoire of coordinated skills that make self-discovery, self-definition, and self-direction and hence autonomy possible. The authentic self is a self that has some degree of proficiency with respect to this competency and that emerges and evolves through…Read more
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30452“The Feminist Debate over Values in Autonomy Theory”In Andrea Veltman & Mark Piper (eds.), Autonomy, Oppression, and Gender, Oxford University Press Usa. pp. 114-140. 2014.
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1043Narrative and Moral LifeIn Cheshire Calhoun (ed.), Setting the moral compass: essays by women philosophers, Oxford University Press. 2004.
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1403Recovering the Human in Human RightsLaw, Culture, and Humanities 1-30. 2014.It is often said that human rights are the rights that people possess simply in virtue of being human – that is, in virtue of their intrinsic, dignity-defining common humanity. Yet, on closer inspection the human rights landscape doesn’t look so even. Once we bring perpetrators of human rights abuse and their victims into the picture, attributions of humanity to persons become unstable. In this essay, I trace the ways in which rights discourse ascribes variable humanity to certain categories of …Read more
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93The value of autonomy - even personal autonomy - cannot be confined to the private sphere. Because autonomy bears a reciprocal relation to equal opportunity, it must be counted among the cardinal political values.
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73Commentary on Entangled Empathy by Lori GruenHypatia 32 (2): 415-427. 2017.This essay explores four aspects of Gruen's theory. The first section considers her analysis of the concepts of sympathy, pity, and emotional contagion. The second section outlines the main features of her conception of empathy and highlights some worries about empathy that her theory addresses. The third section examines empathy's contributions to moral epistemology. The fourth section queries Gruen's contention that empathy is morally motivating.
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1640Victims of Trafficking, Reproductive Rights, and AsylumOxford Handbook of Reproductive Ethics. 2016.My aim is to extend and complement the arguments that others have already made for the claim that women who are citizens of economically disadvantaged states and who have been trafficked into sex work in economically advantaged states should be considered candidates for asylum. Familiar arguments cite the sexual violence and forced labor that trafficked women are subjected to along with their well-founded fear of persecution if they’re repatriated. What hasn’t been considered is that reproducti…Read more
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38Economic Justice: Private Rights and Public Responsibilities : An Amintaphil Volume (edited book)Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 1985.Twenty distinguished philosophers and social theorists have contributed original papers to this stimulating investigation into the nature of the economically just society. Collectively, and in a remarkably coherent fashion, these papers set out the problems of contemporary social theory within the context of the distributive justice vs. property rights debate initiated by the works of John Rawls and Robert Nozick
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132Personal Autonomy or the Deconstructed Subject? A Reply to HekmanHypatia 7 (1): 124-132. 1992.A response to Susan Hekman's article "Reconstituting the Subject: Feminism, Modernism, and Postmodernism" and to her review of Diana T. Meyers' book Self, Society, and Personal Choice both of which appeared in Hypatia 6
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80Kindred Matters: Rethinking the Philosophy of the FamilyPhilosophical Quarterly 45 (180): 405. 1995.
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162Part II. Section 4. Autonomy Competency: Meyers takes John Rawls to task for giving a superficial account of autonomy. Endorsing deliberative rationality, he furnishes no account of how to achieve it. Meyers argues that her conception of autonomy competency fills the gap in Rawls's theory. Moreover, it is compatible with the emotional bonds of a relational self, and, acknowledging human fallibility, it provides an account of how autonomous people can recognize and correct their missteps. In the …Read more
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41Reading with FeelingReview of Metaphysics 52 (1): 143-144. 1998.Susan Feagin positions Reading with Feeling at the crossroads of aesthetics, philosophical psychology, and moral philosophy. Her principal concern is the activity of appreciating fiction. However, she relies on work in philosophical psychology regarding emotion to develop her views about appreciation, and her aesthetic account of the role of emotion in appreciation has significant implications for ethical theory, which she adumbrates at the end of her book.
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89Khader, Serene. Adaptive Preferences and Women’s Empowerment.New York: Oxford University Press, 2011. Pp. 238. $99.00 ; $24.95 (review)Ethics 123 (2): 378-382. 2013.
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51Because it is characteristic of competencies that they have overarching functions, Meyers considers what the overarching function of autonomy competency might be. She defends a view of personal integration that does not entail counterproductive consistency or unity. She rejects several other solutions to this problem, including compartmentalization, sanity, happiness, and eccentric nonconformity.
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205Feminists rethink the self (edited book)Westview Press. 1997.How is women’s conception of self affected by the caregiving responsibilities traditionally assigned to them and by the personal vulnerabilities imposed on them? If institutions of male dominance profoundly influence women’s lives and minds, how can women form judgments about their own best interests and overcome oppression? Can feminist politics survive in face of the diversity of women’s experience, which is shaped by race, class, ethnicity, and sexual orientation, as well as by gender? Explor…Read more
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72Part III. Section 2. Feminine and Masculine Socialization: Two main problems are explored: 1) How are girls and boys socialized in contemporary western societies? and 2) What are adult women and men like? Meyers appropriates the main outlines of Simone de Beauvoir's account of feminine socialization in The Second Sex, but she also discusses more recent research.
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80Who's There? Selfhood, Self-Regard, and Social RelationsHypatia 20 (4): 200-215. 2005.J. David Velleman develops a canny, albeit mentalistic, theory of selfhood that furnishes some insights feminist philosophers should heed but that does not adequately heed some of the insights feminist philosophers have developed about the embodiment and relationality of the self. In my view, reflenvity cannot do the whole job of accounting for selfhood, for it rests on an unduly sharp distinction between reflexive loci of understanding and value, on the one hand, and embodiment and relationalit…Read more
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123Authenticity for Real PeopleThe Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 9 195-202. 2000.In this paper I shall offer an account of the authentic self that is compatible with human intrapsychic, interpersonal, and social experience. I begin by examiningHarry Frankfurt’s influential treatment of authenticity as a form of personal integration, and argue that his conception of the integrated self is too restrictive. I then offer an alternative processual account that views integration as the intelligibility of the self that emerges when a person exercises autonomy skills.
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19The socialized individual and individual autonomy: An intersection between philosophy and psychologyIn Eva Feder Kittay (ed.), Women and Moral Theory, Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 146. 1989.
Storrs, Connecticut, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Action |
| Normative Ethics |
| Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality |