About This Book
An extended philosophical and political argument that the legal and social subordination of women is unjust and a major impediment to human improvement, the essay critiques customary and theoretical defenses of female inferiority, examines marriage and laws that enforce domination, and disputes claims of natural incapacity. It advocates equal civil rights, access to education, and opportunities for participation in public life, arguing from principles of liberty and utility that gender equality would benefit individuals and society while tracing the psychological and social roots of prevailing prejudice and proposing legal and social reforms to establish equal partnership.
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