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Part of the book series: Recovering Political Philosophy ((REPOPH))

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Abstract

This chapter introduces the further parallel between feminine and Judaism on one hand, and masculine and paganism, on the other. It does so presenting a defence of feminism, which illustrates and makes progressively real, the unhurried worldwide equalization of male and female rights and political capacities. Feminism may be understood as the genuine core stake of the current globalization dynamic. Discussing the relations between psychology and politics, this chapter insists on the not only relevant but necessary parallel between the smallest (e.g. individuals) and the biggest—our whole world—with respect to our most important problems. In this horizon, sexuality and globalization echo each other.

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Notes

  1. The mathematical image of discourse analysis is often useful for clarifying the method employed. We are postulating that the world has a more fractal allure than analogical one (for a clearer and more sober description of this notion, cf Ian Stewart, Does God Play Dice? The New Mathematics of Chaos, chapter 11 (Blackwell Publishing, 2002)).

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© 2014 Laurent Bibard

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Bibard, L. (2014). Fractal Morals. In: Sexuality and Globalization: An Introduction to a Phenomenology of Sexualities. Recovering Political Philosophy. Palgrave Pivot, New York. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137469298_5

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