Catharine Macaulay's influence on Mary Wollstonecraft

In Sandrine Berges, Eileen Hunt Botting & Alan M. S. J. Coffee (eds.), The Wollstonecraftian Mind. London: pp. 198-210 (2019)
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Abstract

Although they were never to meet and corresponded only briefly, Catharine Macaulay and Mary Wollstonecraft shared a mutual admiration and a strong intellectual bond. Macaulay’s work had a profound and lasting effect on Wollstonecraft, and she developed and expanded on many of Macaulay’s ideas. While she often took these in a different direction, there remains a great synergy between their ideas to the extent that we can understand Wollstonecraft’s own feminist arguments by approaching them through the frameworks and ideas that Macaulay provided. These included the principles of classical republicanism, particularly in its understanding of the values of freedom, equality and virtue, and an understanding of reason as grounded in immutable principles that apply equally to both sexes. On the question of women’s freedom and social equality with men, I argue that though Macaulay sets up the problem in far richer and more detailed philosophical terms, in the end it is Wollstonecraft that has the more compelling account of its far-reaching social implications and of how this might be addressed.

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Catharine Macaulay on the Will.Karen Green & Shannon Weekes - 2013 - History of European Ideas 39 (3):409-425.
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Alan M. S. J. Coffee
King's College London

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Joanna Baillie on Sympathetic Curiosity and Elizabeth Hamilton's Critique.Deborah Boyle - forthcoming - Journal of the American Philosophical Association:1-22.

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