| Nancy Tuana - Social Science - 1989 - 268 pages
...empirical observation, and it is primarily through women's voices that I trace its development. But its association is not absolute, and the contrasts between...than to represent a generalization about either sex. (1982, 2) That women speak in this voice is a contingent matter, not a necessary one; it has been their... | |
| Susan Laine Gabriel, Isaiah Smithson - English language - 1990 - 212 pages
...offers several generalizations about how males and females approach moral decisions, she maintains that "the contrasts between male and female voices are...than to represent a generalization about either sex" (2). 33. In addition to the resources cited in note 16, the following collections are useful: Charlotte... | |
| Mary Joe Frug - Law - 1992 - 254 pages
...the sex differences she identifies are not inherent in the sexes in at least two separate passages: The different voice I describe is characterized not...rather than to represent a generalization about either sex.57 The choice of a girl whose moral judgments elude existing categories of developmental assessment... | |
| Mary Jeanne Larrabee - Philosophy - 1993 - 326 pages
...female voices are presented here to highlight a distinction between two modes of thought and to focus on a problem of interpretation rather than to represent a generalization about either sex. (1982a, 2) In presenting excerpts from this work, I report research in progress whose aim is to provide,... | |
| Bill Puka - Philosophy - 1994 - 552 pages
...female voices are presented here to highlight a distinction between two modes of thought and to focus on a problem of interpretation rather than to represent a generalization about either sex. (1982, 2) ln presenting excerpts from this work, l report research in progress whose aim is to provide,... | |
| Sondra Farganis - Social Science - 1996 - 356 pages
..."different voice" as a gendered one: The different voice I describe is characterized not by gender but by theme. Its association with women is an empirical...rather than to represent a generalization about either sex.35 She certainly has been read as giving women a distinct moral and legal voice and some legal... | |
| Alan R. Petersen, Professor Alan Petersen, PH. - Psychology - 1998 - 160 pages
...interplay of voices within each 'sex' - and that contrasts between male and female voices are used 'to highlight a distinction between two modes of thought...than to represent a generalization about either sex' (1982: 2). This seems to be an attempt by Gilligan to forestall any charge that she is developing a... | |
| Michael S. Kimmel - Psychology - 2000 - 334 pages
...Noting as an empirical observation the association of this voice with women, I caution the reader that "this association is not absolute, and the contrasts...convergence marks times of crisis and change." No claims, I state, are made about the origins of these voices or their distribution in a wider population, across... | |
| Barbara Koziak - Philosophy - 2010 - 222 pages
...just, rulebound man, or at least the fact of some gender difference, Gilligan herself asserted that "the contrasts between male and female voices are...to the interplay of these voices within each sex." 26 Although she ultimately left the ideal moral character unarticulated, Gilligan concluded, "Development... | |
| Darlene Juschka - Social Science - 2001 - 718 pages
...Noting as an empirical observation the association of this voice with women, I caution the reader that "this association is not absolute, and the contrasts...convergence marks times of crisis and change." No claims, I state, are made about the origins of these voices or their distribution in a wider population, across... | |
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