" to be objectified is to be only considered for one's physical worth (to be only considered for one's capacity to produce physically fit children, or for one's capacity to provide for the production of physically fit children) "
Philosophy of the Body
Perspective
Attribution
Wikimedia Commons (Artwork)
Website File Name | Category | Original File Name | Wikimedia Commons Link (including license, author, etc) |
---|---|---|---|
imageTopLeft-20AD.png | 20AD | 20AD-1910-Gladys_Cooper.png | http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Gladys_Cooper.jpg |
imageTopRight-2AD.png | 2AD | 331px-Melpomene_sarcophagus_louvre_Ma475.png | http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Melpomene_sarcophagus_louvre_Ma475.jpg |
imageBottomLeft-13BC.png | 13BC | La_tombe_de_Horemheb_(KV.57)_(Vallae_des_Rois_Thabes_ouest)_-2.png | http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:La_tombe_de_Horemheb_%28KV.57%29_%28Vall%C3%A9e_des_Rois_Th%C3%A8bes_ouest%29_-2.jpg |
imageBottomRight-5BC.png | 5BC | 543px-Hermes_Thasos_Louvre_MA696C.png | http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Hermes_Thasos_Louvre_MA696C.jpg |
" objectification is not the demonstration of one's beauty (eg dancing and clothing), rather it may involve this without respect to their subjective significance (eg the manipulation of dancing, manipulation of clothing, exposing oneself without commitment, etc) "
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