http://book.klll.cc/ebooks/76398.opds 2025-09-04T16:41:56Z Women: an inquiry by Willa Muir Free eBooks since 1971. Project Gutenberg https://book.klll.cc webmaster@gutenberg.org https://book.klll.cc/gutenberg/favicon.ico 25 1 2025-09-04T16:41:56Z Women: an inquiry

This edition had all images removed.

LoC No.: 26002003

Title: Women: an inquiry

Original Publication: London: The Hogarth Press, 1925.

Credits: Mairis, Laura Natal and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)

Summary: "Women: an inquiry by Willa Muir" is a philosophical feminist essay written in the early 20th century. The book explores whether there is an essential difference between women and men beyond social conditioning, proposing that women’s distinctive creative power lies in fostering human growth and moral life, while men excel at shaping conscious systems and forms. The essay moves from exposing men’s contradictory view of women (feared and revered) to a core hypothesis drawn from motherhood: women’s energy is more engaged with unconscious life (growth, intuition, emotion), while men’s is more engaged with conscious life (form, reason, abstraction). From this, it argues that women create individuals and inner harmony, and men build systems—both necessary and complementary. It critiques conventional morality as a masculine tool for preserving systems through impersonal codes and punishment, urging women to develop independent, psychological, and religiously grounded values rooted in creative love and a fearless grasp of human experience. The book calls on women to know themselves, reject restrictive “purity” ideals, and carry their womanhood into public life where systems touch individuals (e.g., welfare, justice, reform). It considers art as a meeting of unconscious vitality and conscious form, suggesting women thrive in arts close to lived personality and concrete experience, and closes by urging a rethinking of women’s aims and education so that both sexes can cooperate as equal, complementary creators of human life and its institutions. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Reading Level: Reading ease score: 47.7 (College-level). Difficult to read.

Author: Muir, Willa, 1890-1970

EBook No.: 76398

Published: Jun 27, 2025

Downloads: 219

Language: English

Subject: Women

Subject: Women -- Social and moral questions

LoCC: Social sciences: The family, Marriage, Sex and Gender

Category: Text

Rights: Public domain in the USA.

urn:gutenberg:76398:2 2025-06-27T00:00:00+00:00 Public domain in the USA. Muir, Willa en urn:lccn:26002003 1
2025-09-04T16:41:56Z Women: an inquiry

This edition has images.

LoC No.: 26002003

Title: Women: an inquiry

Original Publication: London: The Hogarth Press, 1925.

Credits: Mairis, Laura Natal and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)

Summary: "Women: an inquiry by Willa Muir" is a philosophical feminist essay written in the early 20th century. The book explores whether there is an essential difference between women and men beyond social conditioning, proposing that women’s distinctive creative power lies in fostering human growth and moral life, while men excel at shaping conscious systems and forms. The essay moves from exposing men’s contradictory view of women (feared and revered) to a core hypothesis drawn from motherhood: women’s energy is more engaged with unconscious life (growth, intuition, emotion), while men’s is more engaged with conscious life (form, reason, abstraction). From this, it argues that women create individuals and inner harmony, and men build systems—both necessary and complementary. It critiques conventional morality as a masculine tool for preserving systems through impersonal codes and punishment, urging women to develop independent, psychological, and religiously grounded values rooted in creative love and a fearless grasp of human experience. The book calls on women to know themselves, reject restrictive “purity” ideals, and carry their womanhood into public life where systems touch individuals (e.g., welfare, justice, reform). It considers art as a meeting of unconscious vitality and conscious form, suggesting women thrive in arts close to lived personality and concrete experience, and closes by urging a rethinking of women’s aims and education so that both sexes can cooperate as equal, complementary creators of human life and its institutions. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Reading Level: Reading ease score: 47.7 (College-level). Difficult to read.

Author: Muir, Willa, 1890-1970

EBook No.: 76398

Published: Jun 27, 2025

Downloads: 219

Language: English

Subject: Women

Subject: Women -- Social and moral questions

LoCC: Social sciences: The family, Marriage, Sex and Gender

Category: Text

Rights: Public domain in the USA.

urn:gutenberg:76398:3 2025-06-27T00:00:00+00:00 Public domain in the USA. Muir, Willa en urn:lccn:26002003 1