Mary Wollstonecraft — "I am a woman, and I have a right to think."
I am a woman, and I have a right to think.
I am a woman, and I have a right to think.
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"I am a child of nature, who has been taught to think; and I will not resign my birthright for a mess of pottage."
"I have a soul that is too proud to stoop to any meanness."
"The conduct of a woman, as well as that of a man, ought to be regulated by her reason."
"Men, indeed, appear to me to act in a very unphilosophical manner, when they try to secure the good conduct of women by attempting to keep them always in a state of childhood."
"The beginning is always today."
English writer and proto-feminist philosopher whose A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792) is the founding text of modern feminist theory. Closely associated with Thomas Paine (Rights of Man co-conspirator and revolutionary contemporary) and William Godwin (her husband and philosopher of anarchism). For an intellectual contrast, see Edmund Burke, Anglo-Irish conservative and parliamentarian — Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790) was the explicit target of Wollstonecraft's first book — A Vindication of the Rights of Men (1790), written in the weeks after Burke's appeared. She extended the argument to women in her second Vindication two years later. Burke's tradition-and-prescription conservatism is the worldview Wollstonecraft's career was structured against.
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