An obvious reply would be that philosophy has historically been driven by prestige rather than by objective verification of the verifiable accomplishments of talent, making it impossible for talented women or men to go down in history.
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Ok, only now getting that you’re focussing on talent verification. Do you think that verification of talent is a useful metric when thinking about what to learn (particularly for ideas that have been around a long time)?
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I'm just framing it that way because of the original question about great female philosophers. If you can't verify greatness then it's little wonder if men win the status game before 1950.
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Makes sense. And this conversation has lead me to wonder about the framing. What is this quality of greatness that we associate with thinkers and philosophers, and why do I care about it? And if ‘greatness’ is a flawed focus, is the gender balance of greatness important?
End of conversation
New conversation -
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