By modern standards, her statements in favor of women’s education are bland and conventional, but Wollstonecraft argued for the cultivation of reason and rationality in women to counteract the Gothic romance and frivolity that were fashionable among eighteenth-century elites. Nevertheless, Wollstonecraft felt that women’s education should supplement, not replace, their domestic training: “No employment of the mind is a sufficient excuse for neglecting domestic duties, and I cannot conceive that they are incompatible. A woman may fit herself to be the