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Ethics

What does it mean to "objectify" someone? What makes an act or process objectifying?
Accepted:
May 28, 2010

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Charles Taliaferro
May 29, 2010 (changed May 29, 2010) Permalink

Good question! It might seem harmless to think of a person objectively or even to think of him or her as an object (e.g. "she is the object of my love and attention"). But when it is used derisively, it seems that to objectify someone is to not take their subjectivity or character seriously as important for its own sake. In this sense, one objectifies a person by treating him or her merely as an object, and possibly an object to be used for one's self-interest, e.g. a man may objectify a woman by thinking of her merely as an object of desire or arousal and not as important and worthy of respect for her own sake.

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