<p><a>The second edition of </a><i>Overcoming Objectification: A Carnal Ethics</i> provides a critical analysis of the widely used (particularly in feminist philosophy) concept of objectification, and offers a new concept (derivatization) in its stead.</p><p>Cahill suggests an abandonment of objectification due to the concept¿s dependence on a Kantian ideal of personhood, an ideal that fails to recognize sufficiently the role the body plays in personhood, and results in an implicit vilification of the body and sexuality. Phenomena associated with objectification are ethically problematic not because they render women objects, and therefore not-persons, but rather because they construct feminine subjectivity and sexuality as wholly derivative of masculine subjectivity and sexuality. Women are not objectified as much as they are derivatized: turned into a mere reflection or projection of the other. Cahill argues for a sexual ethics grounded in difference, carnality, and i