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Alasdair MacIntyre
(1929 - 2025)

Last affiliation: University of Notre Dame
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    269
    • Most Recent
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    • Topics
  •  Events
    1
  •  News and Updates
    141

 More details
  • University of Notre Dame
    Department of Philosophy
    Retired faculty
Notre Dame, Indiana, United States of America
  • All publications (269)
  •  1864
    Cohen, G. A. Why Not Socialism? Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2009 . Pp. 83. $14.95 (cloth)
    Ethics 120 (2): 391-395. 2010.
    Socialism and Marxism
  •  1071
    Women’s Human Rights, Then and Now: Symposium on Eileen Hunt Botting’s Wollstonecraft, Mill, and Women’s Human Rights(New Haven: Yale University Press, 2016)
    with Ruth Abbey, Linda M. G. Zerilli, and Eileen Hunt Botting
    Political Theory 46 (3): 426-454. 2018.
    EgalitarianismCivil and Political RightsRights and ReligionLiberalismInternational Philosophy, MiscL…Read more
    EgalitarianismCivil and Political RightsRights and ReligionLiberalismInternational Philosophy, MiscLiberal FeminismFeminist History of PhilosophyMary Wollstonecraft
  •  2
    Whose Justice? Which Rationality?
    Philosophy 64 (250): 564-566. 1988.
  •  1
    A Short History of Ethics
    Philosophy 43 (163): 67-68. 1967.
  •  3
    Aft er Virtue: A Study in Moral Th eory
    Philosophy 57 (222): 551-553. 1982.
  •  910
    Difficulties in Christian Belief
    Philosophy 35 (134): 278-278. 1960.
  •  1230
    Three Rival Versions of Moral Enquiry
    Philosophy 66 (258): 533-534. 1991.
  •  3645
    The Religious Significance of Atheism
    with Paul Ricoeur
    Religious Studies 8 (1): 88-93. 1972.
    Philosophy of Religion
  •  15
    Books in Review
    Political Theory 11 (4): 623-626. 1983.
    Social and Political PhilosophyPolitical Theory
  •  733
    Toward a Theory of Medical Fallibility
    with S. Gorovitz
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 1 (1): 51-71. 1976.
    Biomedical EthicsMedical Ethics
  •  318
    Book Review: Robert Spaemann, Persons: The Difference Between `Someone' and `Something', trans. Oliver O'Donovan (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006). vii + 255 pp. 45 (hb), ISBN 978 0 19 928181 (review)
    Studies in Christian Ethics 20 (3): 440-443. 2007.
    Christianity
  •  36
    Human Character and Morality (review)
    Noûs 23 (3): 389-390. 1989.
  •  48
    Historical materialism: The method, the theories
    Philosophical Books 2 (4): 24-24. 1961.
  • Ztráta ctnosti
    Filosoficky Casopis 56 610-616. 2008.
    [After virtue]
  • Positivism, Sociology and Practical Reason
    In A. Donogan, An Perovich & Michael V. Wedin (eds.), Human Nature and Natural Knowledge. Essays Presented to Marjorie Grene on the Occasion of Her Seventy-Fifth Birthday, . pp. 87-104. 1986.
  •  96
    Colloquium 8: Yet Another Way to Read the Republic?
    Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 23 (1): 205-224. 2008.
  •  169
    The intelligibility of action
    In Joseph Margolis, Michael Krausz & Richard M. Burian (eds.), Rationality, relativism, and the human sciences, M. Nijhoff. pp. 63--80. 1986.
    German Philosophy
  •  60
    56. Whose Justice? Which Rationality?
    In Bernard Williams (ed.), Essays and Reviews: 1959-2002, Princeton University Press. pp. 283-288. 2014.
    Social and Political Philosophy
  • Philosophy and its History
    Analyse & Kritik 4 (1): 102-113. 1982.
    Richard Rorty argues that the present state of analytic Philosophy is the result of the collapse of the logical empiricist program. But most of the characteristics of analytic philosophy which Rorty ascribes to that collapse predated logical empiricism. The historical explanation of the present state of philosophy must begin not later than with the schism between philosophy and the other disciplines in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. To begin then leads to a different view of how philo…Read more
    Richard Rorty argues that the present state of analytic Philosophy is the result of the collapse of the logical empiricist program. But most of the characteristics of analytic philosophy which Rorty ascribes to that collapse predated logical empiricism. The historical explanation of the present state of philosophy must begin not later than with the schism between philosophy and the other disciplines in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. To begin then leads to a different view of how philosophical problems are generated
  •  2
    After Virtue, 2nd ed
    The Personalist Forum 2 (2): 156-159. 1986.
    Theories of Personal Identity
  •  89
    Seven Traits for the Future
    Hastings Center Report 9 (1): 5-7. 1979.
    Biomedical EthicsHopeReproductive EthicsNeuroethics
  • Geschichte der Ethik im Überblick. Vom Zeitalter Homers bis zum 20. Jahrhundert
    with Hans-jürgen Müller
    Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 46 (3): 545-545. 1984.
  •  227
    The very idea of a university: Aristotle, Newman, and us
    British Journal of Educational Studies 57 (4): 347-362. 2009.
    No abstract
    Philosophy of EducationAristotle, Misc
  •  337
    Pluralism and the Moral Mind
    The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 1 9-18. 1999.
    Cultural pluralism has caused disturbing problems for philosophers in applied ethics. If moral sanctions, theories, and applications are culturally bound, then moral conflicts ensuing from cultural differences would seem to be irresolvable. Even human nature, good or evil, is not free from cultural determination. One way out of this pluralistic impasse is the expansion of the moral mind. It is the outlet taken by religion, the arts, and philosophy from the earliest time in human culture. In phil…Read more
    Cultural pluralism has caused disturbing problems for philosophers in applied ethics. If moral sanctions, theories, and applications are culturally bound, then moral conflicts ensuing from cultural differences would seem to be irresolvable. Even human nature, good or evil, is not free from cultural determination. One way out of this pluralistic impasse is the expansion of the moral mind. It is the outlet taken by religion, the arts, and philosophy from the earliest time in human culture. In philosophy we find an authentic example of this in Socrates. Following the practice of Socrates, we can try to expand the moral mind philosophically, that is, by working on various forms of reasoning, both deductive and non-deductive, including induction, abduction, dialectics, analogy, and pragmatics.
    Moral PluralismMoral Relativism
  •  305
    A mistake about causality in social science
    with Andrei Korbut
    Russian Sociological Review 12 (1): 139-157. 2013.
    The article considers the problem of actions–beliefs link. As author shows, the widespread approach in social science, those origins can be traced back to Hume and Mill and which tries to reveal the causal relations between beliefs and actions, is mistaken. It is mistaken because it proposes that, firstly, beliefs and actions are distinct and separately identifiable social phenomena and, secondly, causal connection consists in constant conjunction. MacIntyre, instead, proposes, taking as a start…Read more
    The article considers the problem of actions–beliefs link. As author shows, the widespread approach in social science, those origins can be traced back to Hume and Mill and which tries to reveal the causal relations between beliefs and actions, is mistaken. It is mistaken because it proposes that, firstly, beliefs and actions are distinct and separately identifiable social phenomena and, secondly, causal connection consists in constant conjunction. MacIntyre, instead, proposes, taking as a starting point the distinction between physical movement and human action, to consider the actions–beliefs link in terms of the descriptions which the action should correspond to. If we, on being asked for an explanation of what we have done, refer it to an antecedent condition of a Humean kind, we precisely remove it from the class of actions and assign it to, most probably, the class of physical movements. To explain behavior as a genuinely human action, an explanation must refer to the customarily recognized rules of a particular social order. This presupposes that action must fall under some description which is socially recognizable as the description of an action; an action must fall under a description and my actions under a description available to me; and agent can do only what he/she can describe. As an illustration of his approach, author examines the role of Stalin’s philosophical work “Dialectical and historical materialism” in the process of the ideological “closing” of Soviet society
    Causal Theory of ActionPsychological Explanation
  •  80
    Review: Virtues in Foot and Geach (review)
    Philosophical Quarterly 52 (209). 2002.
    Ethics
  •  75
    Ethica Thomistica (review)
    Teaching Philosophy 7 (2): 168-170. 1984.
    Philosophy of Education
  •  52
    Marcuse
    Fontana. 1970.
    20th Century American Philosophy, Misc
  •  49
    Revisions, Changing Perspectives in Moral Philosophy
    with Stanley Hauerwas
    . 1983.
    The Revisions series marks an attempt to recover what is viable in the traditions of which we ought to be the heirs without ignoring what it was that made those traditions vulnerable to modernity.
    Religious Ethics
  •  162
    Review of G.e.M. Anscombe, Faith in a Hard Ground: Essays on Religion, Philosophy and Ethics (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (10). 2008.
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