Nina Karin Monsen

Nina Karin Monsen (born 29 May 1943, in Bergen) is a Norwegian moral philosopher and author. She has written several books, both non-fiction and fiction, and has been active in Norwegian public debate since the early 1970s.

Nina Karin Monsen
Nina Karin Monsen at the Fritt Ord Award ceremony in 2009
Born (1943-05-29) 29 May 1943
Era20th Century, 21st Century
RegionWestern Philosophy
SchoolFeminist philosophy, Personalism

Life

Monsen has a Magister's degree in Philosophy (1969) and was one of the founders of the Norwegian new feminist movement in 1970. Her early work was on the logician Quine and she later studied feminist philosophy. She has become the most visible proponent of Personalism in Norway, with Det elskende menneske (The loving human being, 1987) as her most central work.[1][2]

Monsen grew up in a humanist family, and later converted to Christianity.[3] She lectures in evangelical churches.[4]

She was appointed a government scholar in 2004. In 2009, she was awarded the Fritt Ord Award.

She was married to legal scholar Helge Johan Thue, until he died in 2010.[5][6]

Publications

Non-fiction

  • Det kvinnelige menneske. Aschehoug, 1975
  • Jomfru, mor eller menneske Universitetsforlaget, 1984
  • Det elskende menneske, person og etikk (1987)
  • Det Kjempende menneske, person og etikk (1990)
  • Velferd uten ansikt, en filosofisk analyse av velferdsstaten (1998)
  • Kunsten å tenke, en filosofisk metode til et bedre liv (2001)
  • Den gode sirkel, en filosofi om helse og kjærlighet (2002)
  • Det sårbare menneske, en filosofi om skam, skyld og synd (2004)
  • Livstro, lesetykker (2005)
  • Det innerste valget (2007)
  • Kampen om ekteskapet og barnet (2009)

Fiction

  • Under Godhetens synsvinkel, essays, 1992
  • Kvinnepakten, novel, 1977
  • Jammersminne, novel, 1980
  • Dødt liv, short stories, 1987
  • Inntrengere, novel, 1989
  • Tvillingsjeler, novel, 1993
gollark: Which one?
gollark: I mostly meant that it is quite complex to make and if you want nicer ones you need to throw even more industry at it.
gollark: At some point you probably hit physical limits and have to expand *slower*, but you aren't forced to stop.
gollark: Sure it is. Just expand more. The universe is quite large.
gollark: The smartphone you're probably sending this from is the product of hundreds of billions of currency units of development and capital investment and probably at least 50 countries worth of supply chain.

References

Awards
Preceded by
Per-Yngve Monsen
Recipient of the Fritt Ord Award
2009
Succeeded by
Bushra Ishaq and
Abid Raja
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.