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2The Tasks of Philosophy: Volume 1: Selected EssaysCambridge University Press. 2006.How should we respond when some of our basic beliefs are put into question? What makes a human body distinctively human? Why is truth an important good? These are among the questions explored in this 2006 collection of essays by Alasdair MacIntyre, one of the most creative and influential philosophers working today. Ten of MacIntyre's most influential essays written over almost thirty years are collected together here for the first time. They range over such topics as the issues raised by differ…Read more
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Dependent Rational Animals: Why Human Beings Need the VirtuesPhilosophical Quarterly 51 (203): 266-269. 2001.
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16No Marketing Blurb.
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312Does Applied Ethics Rest on a Mistake?The Monist 67 (4): 498-513. 1984.‘Applied ethics’, as that expression is now used, is a single rubric for a large range of different theoretical and practical activities. Such rubrics function partly as a protective device both within the academic community and outside it; a name of this kind suggests not just a discipline, but a particular type of discipline. In the case of ‘applied ethics’ the suggestive power of the name derives from a particular conception of the relationship of ethics to what goes on under the rubric of ‘a…Read more
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9Hegel on faces and skullsIn Arto Laitinen & Constantine Sandis (eds.), Hegel on action, Palgrave-macmillan. 2010.
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157Book Review:Moral Absolutes: Tradition, Revision and Truth John Finnis (review)Ethics 103 (4): 811. 1993.
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41God, Philosophy, Universities: A Selective History of the Catholic Philosophical Tradition (edited book)Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2009.Alasdair MacIntyre has written a selective history of the Catholic philosophical tradition, designed to show how belief in God informed and informs philosophical enquiry in different historical and social settings
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304Whose Justice? Which Rationality?University of Notre Dame Press. 1988.[This book] develops an account of rationality and justice that is tradition specific.-http://undpress.nd.edu.
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380Philosophy and LanguageProceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 84 23-32. 2010.
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22ForewordIn Adolf Reinach & John Crosby (eds.), The a Priori Foundations of the Civil Law [1913], De Gruyter. 2012.
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37Marx' „Thesen über Feuerbach” - ein Weg, der nicht beschritten wurdeDeutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 44 (4): 543-555. 1996.
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36Review of Ross Harrison (ed.), Henry Sidgwick (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2002 (10). 2002.
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191Ends and EndingsAmerican Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 88 (4): 807-821. 2014.The question posed in this paper is: Is there an end to some type of activity which is the end of any rational agent? It approaches an answer by a critical examination of one view of human beings that excludes this possibility, that advanced by Harry Frankfurt. It is argued that once we have distinguished, as Frankfurt does not, that which we have good reason to care about from that which we do not have good reason to care about, we are able to identify a conception of a final end for human acti…Read more
Alasdair MacIntyre
(1929 - 2025)
Notre Dame, Indiana, United States of America