Annette Baier | |
---|---|
Born |
Annette Claire Stoop 11 October 1929 New Zealand |
Died | 2 November 2012 Dunedin, New Zealand |
(aged 82)
Era | Contemporary philosophy |
Region | Western Philosophy |
School | Analytic philosophy |
Main interests
|
Ethics, Feminist philosophy, Philosophy of mind |
Notable ideas
|
Giving trust a significant role in ethics |
Influences
|
Annette Claire Baier (née Stoop; 11 October 1929 – 2 November 2012) was a New Zealand philosopher and Hume scholar, focused in particular on Hume's moral psychology. She was well known also for her contributions to feminist philosophy and to the philosophy of mind, where she was strongly influenced by her former colleague, Wilfrid Sellars.
For most of her career she taught in the philosophy department at the University of Pittsburgh, having moved there from Carnegie Mellon University. She retired to her native Dunedin, New Zealand, where she graduated from the University of Otago.
She was former President of the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association, an office reserved for the elite of her profession. Baier received an honorary Doctor of Literature from the University of Otago in 1999.
Her husband was the philosopher Kurt Baier.
Baier's approach to ethics is that women and men make their decisions about right and wrong based on different value systems: men take their moral decisions according to an idea of justice, while women are motivated by a sense of trust or caring. The history of philosophy having been overwhelmingly compiled by men, she suggests, leads to a body of thought which apparently ignores the role of nurture and trust in human philosophy.