The Philosophy Book

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276


MAN IS DEFINED AS


A HUMAN BEING AND


WOMAN AS A FEMALE


SIMONE DE BEAUVOIR (1908–1986)


IN CONTEXT


BRANCH
Ethics

APPROACH
Feminism

BEFORE
c.350 BCE Aristotle says, “The
female is a female by virtue of
a certain lack of qualities.”

1792 Mary Wollstonecraft
publishes A Vindication of the
Rights of Woman, illustrating
the equality of the sexes.

1920s Martin Heidegger sets
out a “philosophy of existence,”
prefiguring existentialism.
1940s Jean-Paul Sartre says
“existence precedes essence.”

AFTER
1970s Luce Irigaray explores
the philosophical implications
of sexual difference.

From 1980 Julia Kristeva
breaks down the notions
of “male” and “female” as
characterized by de Beauvoir.

F


rench philosopher Simone
de Beauvoir writes in her
book The Second Sex that
throughout history, the standard
measure of what we take to be
human—both in philosophy and
in society at large—has been a
peculiarly male view. Some
philosophers, such as Aristotle,
have been explicit in equating full
humanity with maleness. Others
have not said as much, but have
nevertheless taken maleness as the
standard against which humanity

is to be judged. It is for this reason
that de Beauvoir says that the Self
(or “I”) of philosophical knowledge
is by default male, and his binary
pair—the female—is therefore
something else, which she calls
the Other. The Self is active and
knowing, whereas the Other is all
that the Self rejects: passivity,
voicelessness, and powerlessness.
De Beauvoir is also concerned
with the way that women are
judged to be equal only insofar as
they are like men. Even those who

Man is defined as
a human being and
woman as a female.

Most of those who have
written about human
nature have been men.

Men have taken maleness
as the standard against
which they judge
human nature.

Men have defined
women by how they
differ from this standard.
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