well in the late 1800s women were able to go get a an education so that is how women got education
For women to have equal jobs, laws, and capabilities as men had - for women to hace equal rights
Declaration of Sentiments
mostly equal to men
He didn't not believe in equality.
Plato believed that men and women should have equal opportunities for education and political participation. Though he believed in different roles for men and women in society due to perceived differences in their nature, he advocated for equality in terms of abilities and capabilities.
Mary Wollstonecraft argued that women and men should have equal rights and opportunities. She believed that women should receive the same education as men to empower them to become independent and active members of society. Wollstonecraft also advocated for women's political and social equality.
Beginning in 1800s, the Women's Seminary Movement advocated schools for women that held them to the same standards of educational achievement as men were, and taught them the same subjects. Major players in this movement were Catharine Beecher, Mary Lyon, and Emma Willard.
Mary Wollstonecraft, an Enlightenment thinker, argued for women's equality in her seminal work "A Vindication of the Rights of Woman" published in 1792. She advocated for women to have access to education and opportunities equal to those of men in order to fully develop their potential and contribute to society.
Mary Wollstonecraft believed in the equality of the sexes and argued for women's rights in her work "A Vindication of the Rights of Woman". She advocated for women's education and emphasized the importance of women being able to think and act for themselves. She believed that society should treat men and women as rational beings with equal rights and opportunities.
Because she advocated and supported women's rights to being equal to men
Women were intellectually equal to men.
Mary Wollstonecraft, an English writer and feminist philosopher, argued in her essay "A Vindication of the Rights of Woman" (1792) that women were just as capable of reason and intellectual development as men. She advocated for equal access to education and opportunities for women to reach their full potential.
During the Enlightenment, women's rights were limited in comparison to men. Women were often seen as subordinate to men and were excluded from many aspects of public life, such as education and political participation. Despite this, some Enlightenment thinkers did advocate for greater rights for women, such as Mary Wollstonecraft who argued for equal education and political rights for women.
That men and women had equal abilities.
No, Aristotle did not believe that men and women should have equal rights in education and work. He held that men and women had different roles in society based on their inherent natures, and that women were naturally subordinate to men.
Mary Wollstonecraft believed in gender equality and advocated for women's rights, including access to education and the right to participate in public life. She believed that women should have the same opportunities as men and should be able to make their own choices and pursue their own passions. Wollstonecraft's work laid the foundation for the feminist movement.