List Price

$26.00

Textbook Details

  • EDITION:
    3rd Edition
  • ISBN:
    0268035040
  • ISBN-13:
    9780268035044
  • PUB. DATE:
    March 2006
  • PUBLISHER:
    University of Notre Dame Press
Advertisement

After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory / Edition 3 by Alasdair MacIntyre

$26.00 List Price
  • Overview
  • EditorialReviews
  • CustomerReviews
  • Features
  • marketplace

Customer Reviews

After Virtue - Provides a clearer understanding of your life in modernityby RichardPoirier

Customer Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

One of the most important philosophy books of the 20th century. Helps those of us living in modernity to understand why what we observe in human behavior and the way that institutions function are inconsistent with how people and institutions represent themselves. I am not referring to mere hypocrisy, which has always existed, but a server limitation of one?s own understanding of the magnitude of contradictory...

Overview -

After Virtue

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: March 2006
  • Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
  • Sales Rank: 132,379

Synopsis

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." Now, twenty-five years later, the University of Notre Dame Press is pleased to release the third edition of After Virtue, which includes a new prologue "After Virtue after a Quarter of a Century."

In this classic work, Alasdair MacIntyre examines the historical and conceptual roots of the idea of virtue, diagnoses the reasons for its absence in personal and public life, and offers a tentative proposal for its recovery. While the individual chapters are wide-ranging, once pieced together they comprise a penetrating and focused argument about the price of modernity. In the Third Edition prologue, MacIntyre revisits the central theses of the book and concludes that although he has learned a great deal and has supplemented and refined his theses and arguments in other works, he has "as yet found no reason for abandoning the major contentions" of this book. He remains "committed to the thesis that it is only from the standpoint of a very different tradition, one whose beliefs and presuppositions were articulated in their classical form by Aristotle, that we can understand both the genesis and the predicament of moral modernity."

About the Author:
Alasdair MacIntyre is research professor of philosophy at the University of Notre Dame