Care ethics
Care ethics emerged in the 1980s as a challenge to individualism, arguing that people are interdependent beings and reaching a good life can only happen if there is a strong base of caring relationships. The theory also moves away from abstractions and universals, turning instead to the daily contextual experiences of care that keep people in a society alive and well: cooking, cleaning, teaching, transporting, resting, and much more. Since care work is disproportionately done by women and people of colour, care ethics seeks knowledge from voices that have a history of being marginalized in philosophy.
Licence: Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 International
Keywords: Care ethics, Interdependence, Contextual experiences
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