
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


More at https://philosophytalk.org/shows/margaret-cavendish.
Margaret Cavendish was a writer of poetry, philosophy, polemics, histories, plays, and utopian fiction. She employed many different genres as a way to overcome access barriers for women and build an audience for her subversive philosophical ideas. So, what was so radical about Cavendish’s views? Why did she think all matter, even rocks, was at least partially rational? And how did she anticipate the term “epistemic injustice” 400 years before it was coined? Josh and Ray explore the life and thought of Margaret Cavendish with Karen Detlefsen from the University of Pennsylvania, co-editor of The Routledge Handbook of Women and Early Modern European Philosophy.
Part of our series Wise Women, generously supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.
By Philosophy Talk Starters4.1
5454 ratings
More at https://philosophytalk.org/shows/margaret-cavendish.
Margaret Cavendish was a writer of poetry, philosophy, polemics, histories, plays, and utopian fiction. She employed many different genres as a way to overcome access barriers for women and build an audience for her subversive philosophical ideas. So, what was so radical about Cavendish’s views? Why did she think all matter, even rocks, was at least partially rational? And how did she anticipate the term “epistemic injustice” 400 years before it was coined? Josh and Ray explore the life and thought of Margaret Cavendish with Karen Detlefsen from the University of Pennsylvania, co-editor of The Routledge Handbook of Women and Early Modern European Philosophy.
Part of our series Wise Women, generously supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities.

90,876 Listeners

38,538 Listeners

6,847 Listeners

38,775 Listeners

9,244 Listeners

10,706 Listeners

3,214 Listeners

6,446 Listeners

112,990 Listeners

16,491 Listeners

16 Listeners

15,829 Listeners

16,419 Listeners

3,577 Listeners

185 Listeners