The thing is, “space alien” thought experiments are very hard to do, given that we’re not space aliens,
That is undoubtedly true. I certainly don’t claim that my views on these matters are entirely free of bias and emotional investment. However, a claim that I would be ready to defend is that there are particular conclusions that would be made, or at least considered plausible, by an ideal detached observer, but whose mere mention provokes virtually unanimous hostility from feminists. At least in principle, one doesn’t have to be an ideal detached observer across the board to form correct judgments of this sort in particular cases.
and they have come out both ways—read Joanna Russ for speculative, “alien’s-eye” fiction about gender that comes out very feminist.
I am curious about this. Which particular works would you recommend?
SarahC:
That is undoubtedly true. I certainly don’t claim that my views on these matters are entirely free of bias and emotional investment. However, a claim that I would be ready to defend is that there are particular conclusions that would be made, or at least considered plausible, by an ideal detached observer, but whose mere mention provokes virtually unanimous hostility from feminists. At least in principle, one doesn’t have to be an ideal detached observer across the board to form correct judgments of this sort in particular cases.
I am curious about this. Which particular works would you recommend?
The Female Man as a novel, “When it Changed” gets roughly the same idea across in short story form.