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    The tyranny of concepts
    Philosophical Books 3 (4): 13-13. 1962.
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    Moral arguments and social contexts
    Journal of Philosophy 80 (10): 590-591. 1983.
  •  21
    Acknowledgments
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 50 (Supplement): 385. 1990.
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    Review of Raymond Geuss, Outside Ethics (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (3). 2006.
  •  2
    Ethics and Politics: Volume 2: Selected Essays
    Cambridge University Press. 2006.
    Alasdair MacIntyre is one of the most creative and important philosophers working today. This volume presents a selection of his classic essays on ethics and politics collected together for the first time, focussing particularly on the themes of moral disagreement, moral dilemmas, and truthfulness and its importance. The essays range widely in scope, from Aristotle and Aquinas and what we need to learn from them, to our contemporary economic and social structures and the threat which they pose t…Read more
  •  124
    Imperatives, reasons for action, and morals
    Journal of Philosophy 62 (19): 513-524. 1965.
  •  95
    Difficulties in Christian Belief; Religious Belief
    with Alan Donagan and C. B. Martin
    Philosophical Review 71 (1): 111. 1962.
  •  67
    Reviews (review)
    British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 20 (2): 174-175. 1969.
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    Goods and Virtues (review)
    Faith and Philosophy 2 (2): 204-207. 1985.
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    After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory, Third Edition
    University of Notre Dame Press. 2007.
    When _After Virtue_ first appeared in 1981, it was recognized as a significant and potentially controversial critique of contemporary moral philosophy. _Newsweek _called it “a stunning new study of ethics by one of the foremost moral philosophers in the English-speaking world.” Since that time, the book has been translated into more than fifteen foreign languages and has sold over one hundred thousand copies. Now, twenty-five years later, the University of Notre Dame Press is pleased to release …Read more
  •  326
    Social structures and their threats to moral agency
    Philosophy 74 (3): 311-329. 1999.
    Imagine first the case of J (who might be anybody, jemand). J used to inhabit a social order, or rather an area within a social order, where socially approved roles were unusually well-defined. Responsibilities were allocated to each such role and each sphere of role-structured activity was clearly demarcated. These allocations and demarcations were embodied in and partly constituted by the expectations that others had learned to have of those who occupied each such role. For those who occupied …Read more
  •  63
    This new edition includes a substantial new preface by the author, in which he discusses repression, determinism, transference, and "practical rationality," and ...
  • Alasdair Maclntyre
    In Gisela Riescher (ed.), Politische Theorie der Gegenwart in Einzeldarstellungen. Von Adorno bis Young, Alfred Kröner Verlag. pp. 343--309. 2004.
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    Reply to Dahl, Baier and Schneewind
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 51 (1): 169-178. 1991.
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    Edith Stein: A Philosophical Prologue, 1913-1922
    Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2005.
    Edith Stein lived an unconventional life. Born into a devout Jewish family, she drifted into atheism in her mid teens, took up the study of philosophy, studied with Edmund Husserl, the founder of phenomenology, became a pioneer in the women's movement in Germany, a military nurse in World War I, converted from atheism to Catholic Christianity, became a Carmelite nun, was murdered at Auschwitz-Birkenau in 1942, and canonized by Pope John Paul II
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    The Savage Mind
    with Claude Levi-Strauss
    Philosophical Quarterly 17 (69): 372. 1967.
    "Every word, like a sacred object, has its place. No _précis_ is possible. This extraordinary book must be read."—Edmund Carpenter, _New York Times Book Review _ "No outline is possible; I can only say that reading this book is a most exciting intellectual exercise in which dialectic, wit, and imagination combine to stimulate and provoke at every page."—Edmund Leach, _Man _ "Lévi-Strauss's books are tough: very scholarly, very dense, very rapid in argument. But once you have mastered him, human …Read more
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    Marxism, an Interpretation
    with M. B. Foster
    Philosophical Quarterly 5 (18): 91. 1955.
  • Relatywizm moralny, prawda i uprawomocnienie
    Studia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 147-166. 2007.