Learning from My Daughter
Autor Eva Kittayen Limba Engleză Paperback – dec 2025
Preț: 138.99 lei
Preț vechi: 187.92 lei
-26% Nou
Puncte Express: 208
Preț estimativ în valută:
24.60€ • 28.68$ • 21.51£
24.60€ • 28.68$ • 21.51£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 01-07 ianuarie 26
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197841150
ISBN-10: 0197841155
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 158 x 234 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197841155
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 158 x 234 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.39 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Kittay provides an excellent read in disability theory and philosophy and offers clarity and persistence in addressing very tough questions.
Learning From My Daughter has much to recommend it. Kittay is, as always, incisive, and Learning From My Daughter is both eloquently argued and replete with hard-won insight. It ought to attract a wide readership both within and beyond the academy.
Eva Feder Kittay's is a thought-provoking book on humility, choosing children, and the place of care in philosophy and disability. It recently [2020] won the prestigious PROSE Award for Philosophy. This book deserves a wide readership both in and beyond philosophy... it will constitute a significant resource for philosophers of disability and philosophers more generally.
Eva Feder Kittay's Learning from My Daughter is, in my view, her best work to date. As I read, I felt I was being guided through a varied terrain
Very few philosophers since Plato have thought about disability so productively and generatively as has Eva Kittay. And very few scholars of disability have so enriched the study of philosophy as has Eva Kittay. Learning from My Daughter is a remarkable book, one that I know I will return to again and again in my intellectual journeys. It should be required reading for anyone who wants to think seriously about what makes us human.
Eva Kittay's work on disability is at once both philosophically astute and deeply moving. She writes with the skill of a careful thinker and the passion of a mother, and her perspective on disability is invaluable.
The advent of a new book from Eva Kittay fills me with gratitude and excitement: the clarity of her thinking and the wisdom of her heart mean that these arguments will be welcomed, puzzled over, disputed with, and treasured for many years to come.
This book . . . emphasizes the central role of care in the moral life, explores the nature and value of giving and receiving appropriate care in various practical contexts, and presents and defends a moral theory of care that aims to justify a set of substantive and stringent moral duties to care for others, especially those who are unable to care for themselves. . . . With characteristic and admirable humility and sophistication, Kittay in this book aims systematically to unify and expand her ideas about care into a free-standing moral theory that could be incorporated into other moral theories or extended into a comprehensive one of its own.
Learning From My Daughter has much to recommend it. Kittay is, as always, incisive, and Learning From My Daughter is both eloquently argued and replete with hard-won insight. It ought to attract a wide readership both within and beyond the academy.
Eva Feder Kittay's is a thought-provoking book on humility, choosing children, and the place of care in philosophy and disability. It recently [2020] won the prestigious PROSE Award for Philosophy. This book deserves a wide readership both in and beyond philosophy... it will constitute a significant resource for philosophers of disability and philosophers more generally.
Eva Feder Kittay's Learning from My Daughter is, in my view, her best work to date. As I read, I felt I was being guided through a varied terrain
Very few philosophers since Plato have thought about disability so productively and generatively as has Eva Kittay. And very few scholars of disability have so enriched the study of philosophy as has Eva Kittay. Learning from My Daughter is a remarkable book, one that I know I will return to again and again in my intellectual journeys. It should be required reading for anyone who wants to think seriously about what makes us human.
Eva Kittay's work on disability is at once both philosophically astute and deeply moving. She writes with the skill of a careful thinker and the passion of a mother, and her perspective on disability is invaluable.
The advent of a new book from Eva Kittay fills me with gratitude and excitement: the clarity of her thinking and the wisdom of her heart mean that these arguments will be welcomed, puzzled over, disputed with, and treasured for many years to come.
This book . . . emphasizes the central role of care in the moral life, explores the nature and value of giving and receiving appropriate care in various practical contexts, and presents and defends a moral theory of care that aims to justify a set of substantive and stringent moral duties to care for others, especially those who are unable to care for themselves. . . . With characteristic and admirable humility and sophistication, Kittay in this book aims systematically to unify and expand her ideas about care into a free-standing moral theory that could be incorporated into other moral theories or extended into a comprehensive one of its own.
Notă biografică
Eva Feder Kittay was Professor of Philosophy at Stony Brook University for over 35 years. She has authored and edited collections as well as numerous articles in the philosophy of language, feminist philosophy, and disability studies. Her pioneering work interjecting questions of care and disability (especially cognitive disability) into philosophy and her work in feminist theory have garnered numerous honors and prizes: the 2003 Woman Philosopher of the Year by the Society for Women in Philosophy, the inaugural prize of the Institut de Mensch, Ethik und Wissenschaft, the Lebowitz prize from the American Philosophical Association and Phi Beta Kappa, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Center for Discovery, an NEH Fellowship, and a Guggenheim Fellowship. She is the parent of a daughter with very significant disabilities.