Nina Karin Monsen at the Fritt Ord Award ceremony in 2009 |
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Full name | Nina Karin Monsen |
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Born | May 29, 1943 |
Era | 20th Century, 21st Century |
Region | Western Philosophy |
School | Feminist philosophy, Personalism |
Nina Karin Monsen (born 29 May 1943 in Bergen) is a Norwegian moral philosopher and author.
She was appointed a government scholarship awardee (Norwegian: statsstipendiat) in 2004. She has written several books, both non-fiction and fiction works, and has been active in Norwegian public debate since the early 1970s.
Monsen is Magister of 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 later feminist philosophy; she since became the most visible proponent of Personalism in Norway, with Det elskende menneske (The loving human being, 1987) as the most central work.[1][2]
Monsen grew up in a humanist family, but later convert to Christianity through philosophic thinking.[3] Recently, Monsen has been a strong opponent of the introduction of same-sex marriage in Norway.
In 2009, she was awarded the Fritt Ord Award.
She was married to legal scholar Helge Johan Thue until he died in 2010.[4][5]
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Preceded by Per-Yngve Monsen |
Recipient of the Fritt Ord Award 2009 |
Succeeded by Bushra Ishaq and Abid Raja |