Fair use -- excerpt and link to the full article on Plato/Stanford:
Feminist Epistemology and Philosophy of Science
First published Wed Aug 9, 2000; substantive revision Wed Aug
5, 2015
Feminist epistemology and philosophy of science studies the ways
in which gender does and ought to influence our conceptions of
knowledge, the knowing subject, and practices of inquiry and
justification. It identifies ways in which dominant conceptions and
practices of knowledge attribution, acquisition, and justification
systematically disadvantage women and other subordinated groups, and
strives to reform these conceptions and practices so that they serve
the interests of these groups. Various practitioners of feminist
epistemology and philosophy of science argue that dominant knowledge
practices disadvantage women by (1) excluding them from inquiry, (2)
denying them epistemic authority, (3) denigrating their “feminine”
cognitive styles and modes of knowledge, (4) producing theories of
women that represent them as inferior, deviant, or significant only
in the ways they serve male interests, (5) producing theories of
social phenomena that render women's activities and interests, or
gendered power relations, invisible, and (6) producing knowledge
(science and technology) that is not useful for people in subordinate
positions, or that reinforces gender and other social hierarchies.
Feminist epistemologists trace these failures to flawed conceptions
of knowledge, knowers, objectivity, and scientific methodology. They
offer diverse accounts of how to overcome these failures. They also
aim to (1) explain why the entry of women and feminist scholars into
different academic disciplines, especially in biology and the social
sciences, has generated new questions, theories, and methods, (2)
show how gender and feminist values and perspectives have played a
causal role in these transformations, (3) promote theories that aid
egalitarian and liberation movements, and (4) defend these
developments as cognitive, not just social, advances.
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