Care Tronto
Care Tronto
Care Tronto
REFERENCES
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access to Signs
JOAN C. TRONTO
The work of Carol Gilligan and her associates, which describes "an ethic of
care" that complements an understanding of morality as concerned with
justice, has been cited frequently as proof of the existence of a "women's
morality."' Gilligan has asserted from the first that she does not regard the
The research for this paper was conducted with support from a Scholar's Incentive Award
from the City University of New York and with the aid of the research facilities office of the
Library of Congress. I am grateful to these institutions for their support. Earlier drafts of this
paper were read at the University of Minnesota in May 1985, at Hunter College in October
1985, and at the seminar on "Feminist Ways of Knowing" held at Douglass College in October
1985. I wish to thank the many listeners who raised questions on these occasions. Special
thanks are due Mary Dietz and Annmarie Levins, who commented on earlier drafts of this
paper.
See Carol Gilligan, "In a Different Voice: Women's Conceptions of Self and of Morality,"
Harvard Educational Review 47, no. 4 (November 1977): 481-517, "Woman's Place in Man's
Life Cycle," Harvard Educational Review 49, no. 4 (November 1979): 431-46, "Justice and
Responsibility: Thinking about Real Dilemmas of Moral Conflict and Choice," in Toward
Moral and Religious Maturity: The First International Conference on Moral and Religious
Development (Morristown, N.J.: Silver Burdett Co., 1980), In a Different Voice: Psychologi-
cal Theory and Women's Development (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1982),
"Do the Social Sciences Have an Adequate Theory of Moral Development?" in Social Science
as Moral Inquiry, ed. Norma Haan, Robert N. Bellah, Paul Rabinow, and William M.
Sullivan (New York: Columbia University Press, 1983), 33-51, and "Reply" in "On In a
Different Voice: An Interdisciplinary Forum," Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and
[Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 1987, vol. 12, no. 4]
C 1987 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved. 0097-9740/87/1204-0003$01.00
644
Society 11, no. 2 (Winter 1986): 324-33. Among collaborative works and works by associates,
see Carol Gilligan and Mary Field Belensky, "A naturalistic Study of Abortion Decisions,"
New Directions for Child development 7 (1980): 69-90; Carol Gilligan, Sharry Langdale, and
Nona Lyons. "The Contribution of Women's Thought to Development Theory: The Eli-
mination of Sex Bias in Moral Development Research and Education" (Washington, D.C.:
National Institute of Education, 1982); Susan Pollakand Carol Gilligan, "Images of Violence
in Thematic Apperception Test Stories,"Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 42, no.
1 (January 1982): 159-67, "Differing about Differences: The Incidence and Interpretation of
Violent Fantasies in Women and Men," ibid. 45, no. 5 (November 1983): 1172-75, and
"Killing the Messenger," ibid. 48, no. 2 (February 1985): 374-75; Nona Lyons, "Two
Perspectives: On Self, Relationships, and Morality," Harvard Educational Review 53, no. 2
(May 1983): 125-45; and John M. Murphy and Carol Gilligan, "Moral Development in Late
Adolescence and Adulthood: A Critique and Reconstruction of Kohlberg's Theory," Human
Development 23, no. 2 (1980): 77-104.
2 Gilligan, In a Different Voice, 2, and "Reply," 327.
3 See "On In a Different Voice: An Interdisciplinary Forum," in Signs 11, no. 2 (Winter
1986): Linda K. Kerber, "Some Cautionary Words for Historians," 304-10, esp. 309; Cather-
ine G. Greeno and Eleanor E. Maccoby, "How Different Is the 'Different Voice'?" 310-16,
esp. 315; Zella Luria, "A Methodological Critique," 316-21, esp. 318; and Carol B. Stack,
"The Culture of Gender: Women and Men of Color," 321-24, esp. 324.
4 Gilligan, "Reply," 330.
5 Nel Noddings, Caring: A Feminine Approach to Ethics and Moral Education (Berkeley
and Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1984); Sara Ruddick, "Maternal Thinking,"
Feminist Studies 6, no. 2 (Summer 1980): 342-67, "Preservative Love and Military Destruc-
tion: Some Reflections on Mothering and Peace," in Mothering: Essays in Feminist Theory,
645
Carol Gilligan originally devised her ethic of care when she sought t
address problems she saw in Lawrence Kohlberg's psychology of moral
development.7 Her argument provides a psychological and developmenta
account of why women's moral statements are often expressed in terms of
caring, but her approach leaves many questions unexplored.8 In suggesting
that an ethic of care is gender related, Gilligan precludes the possibilit
ed. Joyce Trebilcot (Totowa, N.J.: Rowman & Allanheld, 1983), 231-62, and "Pacifying th
Forces: Drafting Women in the Interests of Peace," Signs 8, no. 3 (Spring 1983): 471-89
6 See as evidence the Ms. article in which Gilligan is proclaimed the magazine's "Woman
of the Year": Lindsy Van Gelder, "Carol Gilligan: Leader for a Different Kind of Future," M
12, no. 7 (January 1984): 37-40, 101. A quick perusal of the entries in the Social Scienc
Citation Index will reveal how widely, and in what diverse scholarly fields, Gilligan's work
being cited. In her survey of developments in psychology of women for 1983-84, Sarah B.
Watstein noted, "The very name Gilligan has become a buzzword in both academic an
feminist circles" (Watstein, "Psychology," in The Women's Annual, Number 4: 1983-1984,
ed. Sarah M. Pritchard [Boston: G. K. Hall & Co., 1984], 167-86, esp. 178).
7 See Lawrence Kohlberg, with Charles Levine and Alexandra Hewer, "The Current
Formulation of the Theory," in Essays in Moral Development, vol. 2, The Psychology of Mor
Development: The Nature and Validity of Moral Stages by Lawrence Kohlberg (New Yor
Harper & Row, 1984), 212-319. One extensive bibliography is James S. Leming, Foundation
of Moral Education: An Annotated Bibliography (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1983)
8 Gilligan herself noted the way in which theories are confined by the questions they seek
to address. See her "Do the Social Sciences Have an Adequate Theory of Moral Develop-
ment?" (n. 1 above), 36.
646
9 Linda J. Nicholson made a similar point when she warned against overgeneralizing
gender differences in "Women, Morality and History," Social Research 50, no. 3 (Autumn
1983): 514-36, esp. 515.
10 See, e.g., William M. Kurtines and Jacob L. Gewirtz, eds., Morality, Moral Behavior,
and Moral Development (New York: John Wiley & Sons, 1984).
n Gilligan, In a Different Voice (n. 1 above), 18.
12 Some scholars have challenged Gilligan's claim of gender difference. John M. Brough-
ton, reviewing the interviews, found both men and women exhibiting both modes of moral
expression. See his "Women's Rationality and Men's Virtues: A Critique of Gender Dualism
in Gilligan's Theory of Moral Development," Social Research 50, no. 3 (Autumn 1983):
597-642. Debra Nails also believes that Gilligan has exaggerated the extent of gender
difference in her findings. See her "Social-Scientific Sexism: Gilligan's Mismeasure of Man,"
ibid., 643-64. Cynthia J. Benton et al., "Is Hostility Linked with Affiliation among Males and
with Achievement among Females? A Critique of Pollak and Gilligan,"Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology 45, no. 5 (November 1983): 1167-71, report a failed attempt to replicate
Gilligan's findings about violence. Other methodological criticisms are raised by Greeno and
Maccoby, and Luria (both n. 3 above). Judy Auerbach, Linda Blum, Vicki Smith, and
Christine Williams observe that since Gilligan leaves out considerations such as class and
religion, "Gilligan attributes all the differences she does encounter to gender" ("On Gilligan's
In a Different Voice," Feminist Studies 11, no. 1 [1985]: 149-61, esp. 157). Kohlberg's own
position on gender difference has changed since his initial finding: he now finds no significant
gender difference. His challenge to Gilligan's finding rests on Lawrence J. Walker's extensive
review of the literature (Walker, "Sex Differences in the Development of Moral Reasoning: A
Critical Review," Child Development 55, no. 3 [ June 1984]: 677-91; also cited by Grenno and
Maccoby, and Luria). Most studies in Walker's review reported no gender differences; those
that did find differences found them among women who have been more isolated from
"role-taking" opportunities in society, which is how Kohlberg has always explained gender
difference (see Lawrence Kohlberg with Charles Levine and Alexandra Hewer, "Synopses
and Detailed Replies to Critics," in Kohlberg [n. 7 above], 345-61, esp. 347). Insofar as
Walker reviewed "justice-reasoning" tests, Gilligan is willing to concede that there are no
647
gender differences, but, since justice reasoning is only one part of morality, his finding does
not address the issue of gender difference in moral reasoning. See Gilligan's "Reply" (n. 1
above), 328. It is perhaps interesting to note that this dispute follows a pattern that should be
familiar to social scientists: different methodologies tend to produce different results. Here
two groups of investigators are looking at related but different phenomena. Each group
claims, using its method, that the findings of the other group are invalid.
13 Gilligan, In a Different Voice, 19.
14 See Lyons (n. 1 above).
648
15 Hilary Graham, "Caring: A Labour of Love," in A Labour of Love: Women, Work and
Caring, ed. Janet Finch and Dulcie Groves (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1983), 13-30,
esp. 17. Graham draws this conclusion from her examination of the works of Karen Horney,
Jean Baker Miller, and Nancy Chodorow. Greeno and Maccoby also review the basis for
psychological gender differences.
16 Gilligan, "In a Different Voice: Women's Conceptions of Self and of Morality" (n. 1
above), 486, 487, and 490. For further support of this finding, see Gail Golding and Toni
Laidlaw, "Women and Moral Development: A Need to Care," Interchange 10, no. 2 (1979-
80): 95-103, esp. 102.
17 Anne Colby, Lawrence Kohlberg, J. Gibbs, and M. Lieberman, "A Longitudinal Study
of Moral Judgment," Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development 48, nos.
1-2 (1983): 1-96, esp. 70.
649
whites, blacks, and Chicanos discovered that white children were ahead of
the minority children.'8 Would a study of these groups indicate that, a
Gilligan found to be true for women, their moral views were not underde
veloped but simply not captured by Kohlberg's categories?"9
To my knowledge, no one has examined minority group members using
Gilligan's methodology to see if they fit the morality of care better than
they fit Kohlberg's categories. Gilligan's abortion study, like Kohlberg
work, is limited in that it focuses solely on the privileged.20 Yet circumstan
tial evidence strongly suggests that the moral views of minority grou
members in the United States are much more likely to be characterized by
an ethic of care than by an ethic of justice. For example, Robert Coles
discussions with Chicano, Eskimo, and Indian children revealed frequen
criticisms of Anglos for their inattention to proper moral concerns and fo
their lack of care for others and for the earth.2' Similarly, in his depiction o
core black culture, John Langston Gwaltney reveals that blacks frequently
express similar moral concerns.22 Core black culture, according to Gwalt-
ney, emphasizes basic respect for others, a commitment to honesty, gener
osity motivated by the knowledge that you might need help someday, and
respect for the choices of others. In the case histories that Gwaltney
recorded, one person after another invoked these virtues and contraste
650
them to the views of the white majority, who were characterized as greedy,
cheap, and self-involved, and as people who lie when it proves advan-
tageous. Is this morality less coherent because it is not expressed abstract-
ly? As Gwaltney succinctly put it, "Black Americans are, of course, capable
of the same kind of abstract thinking that is practiced by all human cultures,
but sane people in a conquest environment are necessarily preoccupied
with the realities of social existence."23
Gerald Gregory Jackson also has identified characteristics of West
African and Afro-American patterns of thought that are closely reminiscent
of Gilligan's different voice, except that they are part of a large, coherent
account of the place of humans in the cosmos. In contrast to the "analytical,
logical, cognitive, rational, step by step" thinking of Europeans and Euro-
Americans, African thought relies on "syncretistic reasoning, intuitive,
holistic, affective" patterns of thought in which "comprehension [comes]
through sympathy."2' Indeed, Wade W. Nobles relates this different,
connected pattern of thought to the fact that black Americans do not seem
to have the same self-concept as whites. Nobles characterizes this view of
the self, which stresses "a sense of'cooperation,' 'interdependence,' and
'collective responsibility,'" as the "extended self." The parallel to Lyons's
argument is striking.25
The possibility of a social and not just a psychological cause for Gilli-
gan's different voice greatly broadens the implications of and possible
interpretations of research on an ethic of care. One possible implication is
that Kohlberg's theory of proper moral development is correct, so that the
failure of women and minority groups to develop properly is just a reflec-
tion of a regrettably unequal social order. According to this explanation,
social forces retard the moral development of women and minorities. A
3 Ibid., xxix.
24 Gerald Gregory Jackson, "Black Psychology as an Emerging Point of View," cited by
Anne C. Richards in Sourcebook on the Teaching of Black Psychology, comp. and ed.
Reginald L. Jones (n.p.: Association of Black Psychologists, 1978), 2:175-77. See also Jack-
son's "Black Psychology: An Avenue to the Study of Afro-Americans," Journal of Black
Studies 12, no. 3 (March 1982): 241-60.
25 Wade W. Nobles, "Extended Self: Rethinking the So-called Negro Self-Concept,"
Journal of Black Psychology 2, no. 2 (February 1976): 15-24, esp. 19. Incidentally, we can
raise the same questions about the origins of care among black Americans as we can among
women. Jackson and Nobles provide a cultural explanation that describes blacks as morally
different from whites because of their African roots; this idea parallels the notion that women
care because culturally that is what being a woman is about. Other authors have suggested a
more positional cause: Janet D. Ockerman suggests that social subordination produces the
psychological response of greater group solidarity in Self-Esteem and Social Anchorage of
Adolescent White, Black and Mexican-American Students (Palo Alto, Calif.: R and E Research
Associates, 1979). V. H. Zimmerman explains the different tasks for psychological develop-
ment that black women face as a result of racial discrimination in "The Black Woman Growing
Up, "in The Woman Patient, vol. 2, Concepts of Feminity and the Life Cycle, ed. Carol C.
Nadelson and Malkah T. Notman (New York: Plenum Publishing Corp., 1982), 77-92.
6SI
26 See Lawrence Kohlberg, "From Is to Ought: How to Commit the Naturalistic Fallacy
and Get Away with It in the Study of Moral Development," in Essays in Moral Development
vol. 1, The Philosophy of Moral Development: Moral Stages and the Idea of Justice, by
Lawrence Kohlberg (New York: Harper & Row, 1981), 101-89. The essay was originally
published in 1971.
27 "Justice 'operations' of reciprocity and equality in interaction parallel logical operation
of relations of equality and reciprocity in the nonmoral cognitive domain" (see Kohlberg, "The
Current Formulation of the Theory" [n. 7 above], 306).
28 See Gilligan, In a Different Voice (n. 1 above), chap. 1. See also Nicholson (n. 9 above);
and the Introduction by Sandra Harding and Merrill B. Hintikka, eds., to Discovering
Reality: Feminist Perspectives on Epistemology, Metaphysics, Method and Philosophy o
Science (Dordrecht: D. Reidel Publishing Co., 1983).
652
The first sense of the word moral corresponds to ... "the moral
point of view" [that] stresses attributes of impartiality, universaliza-
bility, and the effort and willingness to come to agreement or
consensus with other human beings in general about what is right.
It is this notion of a "moral point of view" which is most clearly
embodied psychologically in the Kohlberg stage model of justice
reasoning.
There is a second sense of the word moral, which is captured by
Gilligan's focus upon the elements of caring and responsibility,
most vividly evident in relations of special obligation to family and
friends.32
29 See the description of "normal science" in Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific
Revolutions, 2d ed. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1970). Knowledge is conservative
in that we tend to conceive new knowledge in existing frameworks; unless knowledge contains
a challenge to the context in which it will likely be placed, it reinforces existing perceptions.
Since gender differences are currently perceived in terms of a male norm, we can expect that
newly identified gender differences will be perceived in the same way. Of course, Lorraine B.
Code is correct when she writes, "To assert a difference... is not, inevitably, to evaluate. That
is an additional step: one which no epistemically responsible person, male or female, should
take without careful consideration. This is a fundamental cognitive imperative" (Code,
"Responsibility and the Epistemic Community: Women's Place," Social Research 50, no. 3
[Autumn 1983]: 537-54, esp. 546-47). But the worlds of power and knowledge are inter-
twined; we do not live in a world that adheres to Code's ideal of the epistemically responsible
community.
30 See, e.g., Benjamine R. Barber, "Beyond the Feminist Mystique," New Republic (July
11, 1983), 26-32. An argument similar to mine is made by Nails (n. 12 above).
31 Kohlberg, in "Synopses and Detailed Replies to Critics" (n. 12 above), denies that his
stages of moral development do reflect a gender difference. Kohlberg believes that Gilligan's
most important contribution is her identification of "responsibility" as a separate moral
dimension. See Lawrence Kohlberg, "A Reply to Owen Flanagan and Some Comments on the
Puka-Goodpaster Exchange," Ethics 92, no. 3 (1982): 513-28, esp. 513.
32 Kohlberg, "The Current Formulation of the Theory," 229.
33 Ibid., 230-31.
653
that such decisions involve moral choice, he believes it is clear that these
concerns are parochial and private rather than universal and socially sig-
nificant. If we accept Kohlberg's explanation that there are two differ-
ent types of moral concerns, and if the two are connected to gender, the
pattern is a familiar one: what is male is important, broad, and public;
what is female is narrow, special, and insignificant. Feminist scholars
have stressed the need to reject a simplistic evaluation of the "public/
private split," with its implicit devaluation of the female.34 Accordingly,
then, the concept of women's morality should be disassociated from the
private because the public and the private are not separate-but-equal
moral realms.35
The contours of public morality in large part determine the shape of
private morality. Indeed, it is in the public realm that the boundaries of the
private are drawn. To use Kohlberg's example, if the universal, consensual
norms of society did not permit divorce, then the woman who expressed
her personal moral dilemma about divorce would have faced no moral
dilemma at all; the boundaries about what would be right and wrong would
already be fixed, and she would know that choosing divorce would be
wrong.
This last point raises a troublesome possibility. Perhaps women's
morality is just a collection of "moral leftovers," of questions that gain
significance only because they are left somewhat open-ended by the com-
mandments and boundaries of public morality. Gilligan has noted that the
ethic of care is a relational ethic, that it is tied to who one is, to what position
one occupies in society. Such concerns have been considered of a sec-
ondary importance in the moral life of any community. In other words, the
requirements of justice have traditionally set the boundaries of care.
As long as women's morality is viewed as different and more particular
than mainstream moral thought, it inevitably will be treated as a secondary
form of moral thinking. This is true because, as the etymology suggests,
that which is private is deprived in at least one sense: insofar as the
boundaries of the private (in this case, private morality as expressed by
care) are set by the categories and definitions of the public (in this case,
public morality, i.e., the ethic of justice), that which is relegated to the
34 See M. Rosaldo, "The Use and Abuse of Anthropology: Reflections on Feminism and
Cross-cultural Understanding," Signs 5, no. 3 (Spring 1980): 389-417. Linda Imray and
Audrey Middleton suggest that the problem is not in the public/private dichotomy itself
but in our failure to understand that what is essential in the public/private split is not
"activity" or "sphere" but power (Imray and Middleton, "Public and Private: Marking the
Boundaries," in The Public and the Private, ed. Eva Gamarnikow, David H. J. Morgan, June
Purvis, and Daphne Taylorson [London: Heinemann, 1983], 12-27).
35 A different perspective on the problem of public/private life is presented in Jean Bethke
Elshtain's "Antigone's Daughters," Democracy 2, no. 2 (April 1982): 46-59. For a response to
Elshtain, see Mary G. Dietz, "Citizenship with a Feminist Face: The Problem with Maternal
Thinking," Political Theory 13, no. 1 (February 1985): 19-37.
654
private is not judged on its own terms. Private morality is not perceived as
independent of the "more important" public realm. It is by nature depen-
dent and secondary.
Thinkers who advocate a women's morality have almost always as-
sumed that it is a necessary corrective, not an alternative, to prevailing
moral views.3 By so doing, they have made it relatively easy for critics to
dismiss women's morality as secondary and irrelevant to broader moral and
political concerns.37 To argue that women's morality is a corrective to
prevailing modes of morality is to make a functionalist argument. To the
extent that women's moral difference is viewed as functional to the im-
provement of the morality of society as a whole, it remains secondary. 3 If,
armed with Gilligan's findings and similar work, the best feminists can do is
to claim that letting women assert their morality in more important parts of
public life will improve life,39 or that public life is unimportant and women
should cultivate morality in the domestic realm,40 then they are doomed to
failure. Such arguments, all of which take the form "we can be useful to
36 Carol Gilligan, in "Do the Social Sciences Have an Adequate Theory of Moral Develop-
ment?" (n. 1 above), seems to suggest that care is such a complementary moral theory.
37 A good example of this phenomenon is the fate of Jane Addams. Addams was enormously
popular for her good works during the first two decades of this century. When the United
States entered World War I, though, and she continued to maintain a steadfast belief that
moral values, including pacifism, should guide political action, she was vilified as a traitor.
Although Addams was honored with the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1931, her reputation and
political influence never recovered their prewar levels. See Allen F. Davis, American
Heroine: The Life and Legend of Jane Addams (New York: Oxford University Press, 1977). An
argument similar to the one I make here is found in Emily Stoper and Roberta Ann Johnson,
"The Weaker Sex and the Better Half: The Idea of Women's Moral Superiority in the
American Feminist Movement," Polity 10, no. 2 (Winter 1977): 192-217. I should note that
my criticism of the misuse of this argument is not directed against Carol Gilligan herself.
Auerbach, Blum, Smith, and Williams (n. 12 above) raise a different objection to the political
implications of Gilligan's work. While I have emphasized how the women's morality argument
can be turned to conservative purposes (a point they make on 159), they also assert that "the
problem with [Gilligan's] book is not that its politics are bad, but that it lacks a politics
altogether" (160). Gilligan hinted at a response to this criticism when she alluded to the need
for both moralities to play a part in "public as well as private life" ("Reply" [n. 1 above], 326).
Yet she has not made clear what that interaction might mean.
38 Several authors have made arguments similar to this one. See especially James C.
Walker, "In a Diffident Voice: Cryptoseparatist Analysis of Female Moral Development,"
Social Research 50, no. 3 (Autumn 1983): 665-95; Judith Stacey, "The New Conservative
Feminism," Feminist Studies 9, no. 3 (Fall 1983): 559-83. My use of the language of
functionalism is inspired here by my reading of Susan Moller Okin, Women in Western
Political Thought (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1978).
39 See, e.g., Alice Rossi, "Beyond the Gender Gap: Women's Bid for Political Power,"
Social Science Quarterly 64, no. 4 (December 1983): 718-33, esp. 731; and Katherine E.
Kleeman's pamphlet, Learning to Lead: Public Leadership Education Programs for Women
(n.p.: Public Leadership Education Network, 1984), 3: "Psychologist Carol Gilligan provides
us with additional justification for bringing more women into public life."
40 See, e.g., Susan Tenenbaum, "Women through the Prism of Political Thought," Polity
15, no. 1 (Fall 1982): 90-102.
655
you," ignore the fact that privileged men are the adjudicators of what is
useful, of what is important, and, therefore, of what stands most in need of
correction. Rather than presenting an alternative moral theory, then,
privatized women's morality is a supplemental moral theory. And when
and how that different moral voice gets heard is beyond the power of the
"different" to decide. In this way, as has happened before, women's moral
voice, the ethic of care, is easily dismissed.
In arguing that there is a strategic problem with women's morality, I do
not mean to imply that strategy overshadows truth. If women were morally
different from men, then strategy would not allow us to dismiss this fact.
Yet the facts are not so simple, and it is thus legitimate to see if the direction
in which the facts are likely to lead requires that we place them in a
different intellectual context. I have tried to show that the consequences of
a simplistic embrace of the ethic of care as specifically women's morality are
potentially harmful. This is not to say that an ethic of care is morally
undesirable but that its premises must be understood within the context of
moral theory, rather than as the given facts of a gender-based psychological
theory.
41 See Sara Ruddick, "Preservative Love and Military Destruction," and "Pacifying the
Forces" (both n. 5 above). Jean Elshtain often seems to support a similar position, but in her
most recent essays, she is critical of a simplistic "beautiful souls" argument on the part of
women. Nevertheless, she has not yet provided any full theoretical alternative to naive
pacifism except to demur about statism. See Elshtain, "On Beautiful Souls, Just Warriors and
Feminist Consciousness," in Women and Men's Wars, ed. Judith Stiehm (Oxford: Pergamon
Press, 1983), 341-49, and "Reflections on War and Political Discourse: Realism, Just War, and
Feminism in a Nuclear Age," Political Theory 13, no. 1 (February 1985): 39-57.
42 Consider, e.g., how ephemeral the tremendous wave of interwar pacifism proved to be.
See Peter Brock, Twentieth Century Pacifism (New York: Van Nostrand, 1970).
656
One reason why, from the standpoint of an ethic ofjustice, care seems to be
such an inadequate moral position is that an ethic of care necessarily rests
on a different set of premises about what a good moral theory is. As Alasdair
Maclntyre noted, the prevailing contemporary notion of what counts as a
moral theory is derived from Kant.44 According to this view, a moral theory
consists of a set of moral principles rationally chosen after consideration of
competing principles. William Frankena refers to this as "the moral point
of view": it is universalizable, impartial, and concerned with describing
what is right, and we would expect chosen moral principles to embody
these standard notions of morality.45
An alternative model for moral theories is contextual metaethical the-
ory.46 Such theories consist of presumptions about the nature of morality
that are different from Kantian-inspired metaethics. In any contextual
moral theory, morality must be situated concretely, that is, for particular
43 Noddings (n. 5 above) distinguishes between the "one-caring" and the "cared-for."
Caring, she claims, is not of itself a virtue but rather the occasion for the exercise of virtues.
44 Alasdair Maclntyre, A Short History of Ethics (New York: Macmillan, 1966), 190.
Indeed, Gilligan has been criticized for not presenting a Kantian form of ethical theory. See
Gertrud Nunner-Winkler, "Two Moralities? A Critical Discussion of an Ethic of Care and
Responsibility versus an Ethic of Rights and Justice," in Kurtines and Gewirtz, eds. (n. 10
above), 348-61. For a critique of Kant that follows some of the directions found in an ethic of
care, see Jean Bethke Elshtain, "Kant, Politics, and Persons: The Implications of His Moral
Philosophy," Polity 14, no. 2 (Winter 1981): 205-21.
45 See William Frankena, Ethics, 2d ed. (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, Inc.,
1973). Kohlberg recites Frankena's argument in the quotation cited by n. 32 above.
46 Contextual moral theories can be teleological, deontological, axiological, or aretaic. The
common theme in contextual moral theories is that they eschew a formal and absolute
resolution of moral questions. The reader may suspect that I am coining a new phrase only to
weaken the position of my opponents. After all, even Kohlberg believes that his theory is
situation specific and not universalistic. Indeed, perhaps only the Kantian perfect duties can
be described as an unqualifiedly nonsituated morality. If that is the case, then my argument
for introducing contextual morality grows stronger because it requires that moral phi-
losophers drop the convenient fiction that their work stops once they have clarified the moral
rules. Contextual moral theories involve a shift of the essential moral questions away from the
question, What are the best principles? to the question, How will individuals best be
equipped to act morally? Many moral philosophers are beginning to claim the need to return
to a contextual ethical theory. A good recent collection of essays that shows both the diversity
and core concerns of this emerging perspective can be found in Alasdair MacIntyre and
Stanley Hauerwas, eds., Revisions: Changing Perspectives in Moral Philosophy (Notre
Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press, 1983).
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658
Universalistic moral theories presume that they apply to all cases; contex-
tual moral theories must specify when and how they apply.52 Advocates
of an ethic of care face, as Gilligan puts it, "the moral problem of inclusion
that hinges on the capacity to assume responsibility for care."53 It is easy to
imagine that there will be some people or concerns about which we do not
care. However, we might ask if our lack of care frees us from moral
responsibility.54
This question arises because we do not care for everyone equally. We
care more for those who are emotionally, physically, and even culturally
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closer to us.55 Thus, an ethic of care could become a defense of caring only
for one's own family, friends, group, nation. From this perspective, caring
could become a justification for any set of conventional relationships. Any
advocate of an ethic of care will need to address the questions, What are the
appropriate boundaries of our caring? and more important, How far should
the boundaries of caring be expanded?
Furthermore, in focusing on the preservation of existing relationships,
the perspective of care has a conservative quality. If the preservation of a
web of relationships is the starting premise of an ethic of care, then there is
little basis for critical reflection on whether those relationships are good,
healthy, or worthy of preservation. Surely, as we judge our own rela-
tionships, we are likely to favor them and relationships like them. It is from
such unreflective tastes, though, that hatreds of difference can grow. One
of the reasons why impartiality is such an appealing universal moral charac-
teristic is that in theory it can prevent the kind of special pleading in which
we all otherwise engage. Yet it may be possible to avoid the need for special
pleading while at the same time stopping short of universal moral prin-
ciples; if so, an ethic of care might be viable.56
The possibility that an ethic of care might lead to the reinforcement of
existing social patterns also raises the question of relativism. It is difficult to
imagine how an ethic of care could avoid the charge that it would embody
different moral positions in different societies and at different times.
Philosophers do not agree about the seriousness of this type of relativism,
however, and contextual moral theories may entail only a milder form of
relativism, one that Dorothy Emmet calls "soft relativism." Viewed from
the perspective of "soft relativism," cultural variation in certain moral
principles does not preclude the discussion of moral issues across cul-
tures.57 The only way an ethic of care could entirely bypass the charge of
relativism would be to posit some caring relationship, for example, the
relationship of parent and child, as universal. This path, however, seems
fraught with even greater difficulties for feminist scholars and prejudges in
an unacceptably narrow way who "caretakers" should be.
Insofar as the difficulty with justice reasoning is that it ignores the
5 This point was illustrated graphically by the Scottish Enlightenment thinker Francis
Hutcheson, who drew an analogy between the relative strength of our closest and furthest
emotional ties and the ties of gravity (Inquiry into the Original of Our Ideas of Beauty and
Virtue [1726] in Collected Works of Francis Hutcheson, ed. Bernhard Fabian [Hildesheim,
West Germany: George Olms Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1971], 1:198-99). Perhaps some indi-
viduals, the saints among us, can resist the greater pull of those closest to us. A provocative
account of moral saints is Susan Wolf, "Moral Saints, "Journal of Philosophy 89, no. 8 (August
1982): 419-39.
6 Peter Winch, "The Universalizability of Moral Judgments," in his Ethics and Action
(London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972), 151-70.
57 See Dorothy Emmet, Rules, Roles and Relations (New York: St. Martin's Press, 1966),
chap. 5, esp. 91-92.
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8 For example, Adam Smith posited the existence of an "impartial spectator" in The
Theory of Moral Sentiments (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1976), 3.1.2, 110. Richard
Brandt is a recent moral philosopher who advocated an "ideal observer" theory, but he has
since repudiated it because it provided no way to prevent the ideal observer from invoking
what would seem to him to be harmless preferences that might seriously constrict others'
choices. (He uses as one example the preference against homosexuality.) See Brandt, A
Theory of the Good and the Right (Oxford: Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press, 1979),
225-28.
59 Consider Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Herland, introduction by Ann J. Lane (New York:
Pantheon Books, 1979); Marge Piercy, Woman on the Edge of Time (New York: Fawcett
Crest, 1976). Lee Cullen Khanna draws a parallel between Gilligan's ethic of care and Piercy's
novel; see her "Frontiers of Imagination: Feminist Worlds," Women's Studies International
Forum 7, no. 2 (1984): 97-102.
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60 See, e.g., Michael Sandel, Liberalism and the Limits of Justice (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1981). It seems doubtful that Sandel's vision holds any more promise for
women than Rawls's theory that feminists need to be somewhat suspicious of invocations of
community. See Brian Barry, review of Sandel, in Ethics 94, no. 3 (April 1984): 523-25; and
Amy Gutmann, "Communitarian Critics of Liberalism," Philosophy and Public Affairs 14,
no. 3 (Summer 1985): 308-21.
61 Consider the argument made by John Hardwig, "Should Women Think in Terms of
Rights?" Ethics 94, no. 3 (April 1984): 441-55. Hardwig answers this question negatively;
among his reasons is that "rights" imply a particular atomistic view of the self. To use rights
arguments, he claims, is to adopt this understanding of the self. Women would have to
surrender their sense of their connected, female nature if they used rights arguments. Hence,
they should not. Alas, Hardwig does not explain how women can convince men who do think
in terms of rights to take them seriously.
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