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008 840424s1984 inu b 001 0 eng
010 _a 83040601
020 _a0268006105 :
_c$16.95
020 _a0268006113 (pbk.) :
_c$8.95
040 _aDLC
_cDLC
_dABK
_eRDA
050 0 0 _aBJ1012
_b.M325 1984
082 0 0 _219
_a170.42
_bMAC
100 1 _aMacIntyre, Alasdair C.
_91031
245 1 0 _aAfter virtue :
_ba study in moral theory /
_cby Alasdair MacIntyre
250 _a2nd ed.
260 _aNotre Dame, Ind. :
_bUniversity of Notre Dame Press,
_c1984.
300 _axi, 286 pages :
_c24 cm.
500 _aIncludes index.
504 _aBibliography: p. [279]-281.
505 _a• A disquieting suggestion • The nature of moral disagreement today and the claims of emotivism • Emotivism social content and social context • The predecessor culture and the enlightenment project of justifying morality • Why the enlightenment project of justifying morality had to fail • Some consequences of the failure of the enlightenment project • Fact explanation and expertise • The character of generalizations in social science and their lack of predictive power • Nietzsche or aristotle • The virtues in heroic societies • The virtues at Athens • Aristotles account of the virtues • Medieval aspects and occasions • The nature of the virtues • The virtues, the unity of a human life and the concept of a tradition • From the virtues to virtue and after virtue • Justice as a virtue: changing concepts • After virtue: Nietzsche or aristotle, Trotsky and St. Benedict • Postscript to the second edition
650 0 _aEthics.
650 0 _aVirtues.
_91033
650 0 _aVirtue.
_91034
650 0 _aAfter virtue
_91035
906 _a7
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_corignew
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942 _cBOOK
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999 _c24780
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