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Gender in ancient Greek and medieval philosophy. Pre-Socratics discover four dimensions of the concept of woman
Socrates and Plato defend the equal dignity of woman and man
The Aristotelian paradox of hylomorphism
Transition from ancient Greek philosophy to women martyrs
Augustine and Boethius offer new dimensions of woman's identity
Hildegard of Bingen defends integral sex complementarity
The Aristotelian revolution and Thomas Aquinas's emergent hylomorphism
Gender in Renaissance, modern, and nineteenth-century philosophy. Traditional polarity in spurious works and satires devalues women
Renaissance humanists affirm women's identities
Religious women writing, speaking, and fighting
Sex/gender polarities overvalue either men or women and lose equality
Platonist humanist theories begin slowly to foster communion between men and women
The Copernican revolution overturns sex/gender ideology
Cartesian dualism strengthens equality but shatters unity
Seventeenth- to twentieth-century philosophers fall into fractional theories
Chronic vigor of integral gender complementarity in the twentieth and twenty-first centures. New vigor for the living idea of integral complementarity of woman and man in neo-Thomism and phenomenology
Corruption, decay, and perversion in sex and gender ideology
New battleground for truth about woman and man
The chronic vigor of integral gender complementarity
Karol Wojtyla's philosophy of integral gender complementarity
Pope John Paul II: apostle of integral gender complementarity.

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