Answer:
"A Vindication of the Rights of Women" called for laws to guarantee women civil and political equality and also for educational reforms to ensure their social and economic equality. She argued that men deliberately conspired to keep women in "a state of perpetual childhood" by giving them inferior, frivolous educations. She stated that that is what encouraged young girls to fixate on fashion and flirtation and made them "only anxious to inspire love, when they ought to cherish a nobler ambition, and by their abilities and virtues exact respect." She also argued that girls should receive the same education as boys, including training that would prepare them for careers in medicine, politics, and business. Lastly she argued that no woman should have to pin her hopes for financial security on making a good marriage. She said that well-educated and resourceful women capable of supporting themselves would make the best wives and mothers, assets to the family and the nation.