"There is no inherent reason or necessity that all women should voluntarily choose to devote their lives to one animal function and its consequences. Numbers of women are wives and mothers only because there is no other career open to them, no other occupation for their feelings or activities. Every improvement in their education, and enlargement of their faculties, everything which renders them more qualified for any other mode of life, increases the number of those to whom it is an injury and an oppression to be denied the choice. To say that women must be excluded from active life because maternity disqualifies them for it, is in fact to say that every other career should be forbidden them, in order that maternity may be their only resource."
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19th-century philosophersPhilosophers from EnglandNon-fiction authors from EnglandWomen authors from EnglandUtilitarians
Original Language: English
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Harriet Taylor Mill, The Enfranchisement of Women (1851)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Harriet_Taylor_Mill
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Harriet Taylor Mill
Harriet Taylor Mill (née Harriet Hardy) (London, 8 October 1807 – Avignon, 3 November 1858) was a philosopher and women's rights advocate.
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