Scholar, Analyst, Author.

Category: The Idea (page 2 of 2)

The Idea

Masthead for Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony’s “The Revolution” [Public Domain Image via Wikimedia.org]

My new project is a book making the argument that women’s equality is the most important idea in all of human history. On the face of it, this would seem a difficult argument, given the very many important ideas that have popped up throughout the human experience.

Obviously, an idea-by-idea competition is impossible. Instead, I rely on a bit of rhetorical jiu-jitsu. I propose that an idea that makes realization of the purpose of life possible for the first time in history is clearly the most important of all ideas.

Building an argument on the purpose of life, I know, sounds like the proverbial leap from frying pan to fire. In fact, though, most everyone knows that for most people most of the time the purpose of life is to love and be loved.

The most important kind of love, in turn, is long-term partnership love between two people. Without diminishing the importance of same-sex relationships (which play a role in my argument), for most people this is about love between a man and a woman.

While historically, our great philosophers, theologians, and scientists have been, at best, thoroughgoing advocates of patriarchy, and more commonly misogynists, they have nonetheless understood that love between adults requires taking the interests of the other as your own.

Seeing the interests of another adult as your own, I propose, cannot be authentic unless you see the other as an equal. Thus, the argument is made that gender equality is essential for authentic partnership love and for realizing this core life purpose.

It is all very straightforward, though of course, there is a bit more to it than that, which is what makes it a book.

Changed Priorities Ahead

My favorite British road sign.

Let me admit up front that my academic interests have been, depending on your perspective, admirably diverse or annoyingly dissolute. I started my college career as a music major, but then discovered economics and political science. I started graduate school in international law. After a detour into theology, I finished my Ph.D. in political science and international relations. Along the way I picked up enough statistics and game theory to teach and publish in those areas as well. And my work has always been informed by a strong interest in political philosophy.

All this is to introduce another turn in my intellectual interests. A few years ago, I got a bug in my brain about the importance and centrality of women’s equality to my life individually, and to our world more generally. Running this down led me to the conclusion that women’s equality is not just an important idea, but really is the most important idea.

My work on this project corresponded with a decision to leave the comforts of a tenured academic position and move to Washington, D.C., which offered better career opportunities for my wife. In addition to the joys of the Jefferson reading room at the Library of Congress, the free museums of the Smithsonian, and a national park three blocks from our house, this shift has given me the latitude to turn to several intellectual adventures that fit less well into a narrow academic silo.

You can read more about the project on women’s equality here.