Why women hug their chains: wollstonecraft and adaptive preferences

Date

2011

Authors

Berges, S.

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Source Title

Utilitas

Print ISSN

0953-8208

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Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Volume

23

Issue

1

Pages

72 - 87

Language

English

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Abstract

In a recent article,1 Amartya Sen writes that one important influence on his theory of adaptive preferences is Wollstonecraft's account of how some women, though clearly oppressed, are apparently satisfied with their lot. Wollstonecraft's arguments have received little attention so far from contemporary political philosophers, and one might be tempted to dismiss Sen's acknowledgment as a form of gallantry.2 That would be wrong. Wollstonecraft does have a lot of interest to say on the topic of why her contemporaries appeared to choose what struck her as oppression, and her views can still help us reflect on contemporary problems such as the ones identified and discussed by Amartya Sen. In this article I will argue that a close look at Wollstonecraft's arguments may lead us to rethink some aspects of Sen's discussion of the phenomenon of adaptive preferences.

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Published Version (Please cite this version)